99-5297. Registration of Securities on Form S-8  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 44 (Monday, March 8, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 11103-11117]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-5297]
    
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Parts 228, 229, 230 and 239
    
    [Release No. 33-7646, 34-41109; File No. S7-2-98]
    RIN 3235-AG94
    
    
    Registration of Securities on Form   S-8
    
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``we'' or 
    ``Commission'') is adopting amendments to Form S-8, related rules under 
    the Securities Act, and Regulations S-K and S-B. Some of the amendments 
    restrict the use of Form S-8 for the offer and sale of securities to 
    consultants and advisors. Other amendments allow the use of Form
    S-8 for the exercise of stock options by family members of employee 
    optionees.
    
    DATES: Effective Date: The amendments are effective April 7, 1999. 
    Compliance Date: Currently effective registration statements on Form S-
    8 need not comply with amended Sec. 230.405 and amended General 
    Instruction A.1.(a)(1) to Form S-8 (referenced in Sec. 239.16b) until 
    May 10, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Anne M. Krauskopf, Special Counsel, 
    Office of Chief Counsel, Division of Corporation Finance, at (202) 942-
    2900.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: We are adopting amendments to Rules 401 \1\ 
    and 405 \2\ under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities Act''),\3\ 
    Item 402 \4\ of Regulations S-B and S-K, and Securities Act Forms S-3 
    \5\ and S-8.\6\
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        \1\ 17 CFR 230.401.
        \2\ 17 CFR 230.405.
        \3\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
        \4\ 17 CFR 228.402 and 17 CFR 229.402.
        \5\ 17 CFR 239.13.
        \6\ 17 CFR 239.16b.
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    I. Executive Summary
    
        Today we adopt rule amendments that address two separate concerns 
    involving the use of Form S-8 to register the offer and sale of 
    employee benefit plan securities.
         First, we adopt amendments designed to restrict the 
    availability of streamlined registration on Form S-8 in order to deter 
    abuse of the form. In particular, the form has been misused to sell 
    securities to the general public through employees and nominal 
    ``consultants and advisors,'' and to register securities issued to 
    stock promoters. We are adopting these amendments as part of our 
    comprehensive agenda to deter registration and trading abuses, 
    including microcap fraud.\7\
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        \7\ See also Securities Act Release No. 7505 (Feb. 17, 1998) [63 
    FR 9632], adopting amendments to Regulation S [17 CFR 230.901 et 
    seq.]; Release No. 39670 (Feb. 17, 1998) [63 FR 9661] under the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (``Exchange Act'') [15 U.S.C. 78a et 
    seq.], proposing amendments to Exchange Act Rule 15c2-11 [17 CFR 
    240.15c2-11]; Securities Act Release No. 7541 (May 21, 1998) [63 FR 
    29168], proposing amendments to Rule 504 [17 CFR 230.504]; 
    Securities Act Release No. 7644 (Feb. 25, 1999), adopting amendments 
    to Rule 504; and Exchange Act Release No. 41110 (Feb. 25, 1999), 
    reproposing amendments to Rule 15c2-11.
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         Second, we are expanding Form S-8 to cover stock option 
    exercises by employees' family members, so that the rules governing use 
    of the form do not impede legitimate intra-family transfers of options 
    by employees. These amendments will facilitate transfers for estate 
    planning purposes and transfers under domestic relations orders.
        Form S-8 is available to register the offer and sale of securities 
    to the issuer's employees \8\ in a compensatory or incentive context. 
    In 1990, we adopted substantial revisions to Form S-8,\9\ including 
    making the form effective immediately upon filing and abbreviating the 
    disclosure format. We permitted the delivery of regularly prepared 
    materials advising employees about benefit plans to satisfy Securities 
    Act prospectus delivery requirements, eliminating the need to file and 
    deliver a separate prospectus that duplicates this information. This 
    treatment reflected a distinction we traditionally have drawn between 
    offerings to employees primarily for compensatory and incentive 
    purposes and offerings for capital-raising purposes. The compensatory 
    purpose of the offering and employees' familiarity with the issuer's 
    business through the employment relationship justify the use of 
    abbreviated disclosure that would not be adequate in a capital-raising 
    transaction.\10\
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        \8\ For this purpose, ``employees'' also includes the employees 
    of the issuer's subsidiaries or parents. See General Instruction 
    A.1(a) to Form S-8.
        \9\ Securities Act Release No. 6867 (June 6, 1990) [55 FR 
    23909].
        \10\ Form S-8 also permits incorporation by reference of the 
    registrant's Exchange Act reports without regard to the length of 
    the issuer's reporting history or the aggregate market value of its 
    securities held by the nonaffiliated public (the issuer's ``public 
    float''). Incorporation by reference from Exchange Act reports into 
    a Securities Act registration statement is not otherwise available 
    unless the issuer satisfies the eligibility requirements for Form S-
    2 [17 CFR 239.12], Form S-3, Form F-2 [17 CFR 239.32] or Form F-3 
    [17 CFR 239.33].
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        The 1990 revisions also made Form S-8 available for offers and 
    sales of securities to consultants and advisors. To be eligible, a 
    consultant must provide the issuer bona fide services not in connection 
    with the offer or sale of securities in a capital-raising transaction. 
    There did not appear to be a reason to distinguish between transactions 
    with regular employees and transactions with consultants or advisors, 
    as long as securities are issued for compensatory rather than capital-
    raising purposes.
    
    A. Abuses of Form S-8
    
        Since the 1990 revisions, some issuers and promoters have misused 
    Form S-8 as a means to distribute securities to the public without the 
    protections of registration under Section 5 of the Securities Act. For 
    example, the issuer registers on Form S-8 securities nominally offered 
    and sold to employees or, more commonly, to so-called ``consultants.'' 
    These persons then resell the securities in the public markets, at the 
    direction of the issuer or a promoter. In some cases, the consultants 
    or employees perform limited or no additional services for the issuer. 
    The consultants or employees then either remit to the issuer the 
    proceeds from these resales, or apply those proceeds to pay expenses of 
    the issuer that are not related to any service provided by the 
    consultants or employees.\11\
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        \11\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Spectrum Information 
    Technologies, Inc. (``Spectrum''), Securities Act Release No. 7426, 
    Exchange Act Release No. 38774, Accounting and Auditing Enforcement 
    Release No. 930 (June 25, 1997); SEC v. Hollywood Trenz, Inc. 
    (``Hollywood Trenz''), Litigation Release No. 15730, Accounting and 
    Auditing Enforcement Release No. 1032 (May 4, 1998).
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        Registration of the shares on Form S-8 does not accomplish Section 
    5 registration of these public sales. The
    
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    transaction that takes place (a capital-raising transaction with the 
    public) is a different transaction from the transaction registered on 
    Form S-8 (a compensatory transaction with employees, including 
    consultants). Although the issuer purports to sell securities to 
    employees, the securities instead are sold to the public. The 
    ``employees'' act as conduits by selling the securities to the public 
    and distributing the proceeds (or their economic benefit) to the 
    issuer. This public sale of securities by the issuer has not been 
    registered, although the Securities Act requires registration. The 
    failure to register this sale of securities deprives public investors 
    of the protections afforded by the Securities Act.
        Form S-8 also has been misused to register securities issued to 
    compensate ``consultants'' and ``advisors'' for promoting the issuer's 
    securities.\12\ This practice facilitates securities fraud by providing 
    compensation as incentive to persons who hype the issuer's stock, and 
    may result in these persons conditioning the market for resales of the 
    issuer's securities.
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        \12\ See, e.g., SEC v. Softpoint, Litigation Release No. 14480, 
    Accounting and Auditing Release No. 666 (Apr. 27, 1995).
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        Today we are adopting some of the amendments that we proposed in 
    February 1998 which are designed to prevent these abuses.\13\ The 
    amendments will:
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        \13\ Securities Act Release No. 7506 (Feb. 17, 1998) [63 FR 
    9648] (``Proposing Release''). We received 17 comment letters on the 
    Proposing Release. These comment letters and a Comment Summary are 
    available for inspection and copying in the Commission's Public 
    Reference Room under file number S7-2-98. Comments that were 
    submitted electronically are available on the Commission's website 
    (http://www.sec.gov).
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         Clarify that Form S-8 is not available for consultants and 
    advisors who directly or indirectly promote or maintain a market for 
    the issuer's securities; and
         Provide that certain registration statements and post-
    effective amendments that automatically become effective upon filing 
    will not be presumed filed on the proper form if the Commission does 
    not object to the form before the effective date.
        We are not adopting today the 1998 proposal to require disclosure 
    in Part II of Form S-8 of the names of, number of securities to be 
    received by, and specific services to be provided by consultants and 
    advisors (the ``Part II disclosure proposal''), nor are we taking any 
    action on the other matters on which we solicited comment. Many 
    commenters viewed these means of addressing consultant abuses as overly 
    broad and burdensome to legitimate compensatory securities offerings.
        Instead, in a companion release we have issued a new proposal that 
    is targeted to prevent abuse of Form S-8 by the types of issuers who 
    have shown the greatest inclination to abuse the form while, to the 
    extent possible, keeping the form available to register legitimate 
    compensatory transactions.\14\ In the companion release, we also have 
    extended the comment period on the Part II disclosure proposal and 
    various requests for comment that were included in the Proposing 
    Release (together, the ``remaining proposals'') \15\ for the duration 
    of the comment period on the new proposal.
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        \14\ Securities Act Release No. 7647 (Feb. 25, 1999).
        \15\ The remaining proposals are described in greater detail in 
    Section II.C, below.
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        We may adopt any combination of the remaining proposals, the new 
    proposal and new solicitations of comment set forth in the companion 
    release. We no longer are considering our 1998 request for comment 
    whether each consulting or advisory agreement should be filed as an 
    exhibit to the Form S-8, and do not intend to adopt an amendment based 
    on this request for comment.
    
    B. Option Exercises by Family Member Transferees; Executive 
    Compensation Disclosure
    
        Currently, Form S-8 is available for the exercise of employee 
    benefit plan stock options only if the option is exercised by the 
    employee/optionee. If an issuer wants to permit an employee's family 
    member transferee to exercise an employee benefit plan option, it must 
    register the sale of the underlying securities upon exercise on a 
    separate, less streamlined registration statement.\16\
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        \16\ See Use of Form S-3 for Transferred Options (Aug. 7, 1997), 
    which allows options transferred by gift from employees to their 
    immediate family members to be treated like ``transferable 
    warrants'' for purposes of registration on Securities Act Form S-3.
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        An employee may obtain significant estate tax savings under current 
    tax law if the employee, during his or her lifetime, transfers a vested 
    option to a family member, who then exercises it. From a tax 
    standpoint, exercise of the option by the employee, with the underlying 
    security later passing to a family member through the employee's 
    taxable estate, is more costly. Our 1996 amendments to the rules under 
    Exchange Act Section 16 \17\ facilitated employees' transfers of 
    options and other derivative securities to their immediate family 
    members (and trusts and partnerships for their benefit) for estate 
    planning purposes.
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        \17\ 15 U.S.C. 78p. The Section 16 amendments are discussed in 
    greater detail in Section III.A.1, below.
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        In the Proposing Release, we proposed amendments that would make 
    Form S-8 available for registration of employee benefit plan stock 
    options exercised by an employee's family member. Today, we adopt 
    amendments that will:
         Make Form S-8 available for the exercise of employee 
    benefit plan options by an employee's family member who has acquired 
    the options from the employee through a gift or domestic relations 
    order. For this purpose, ``family member'' will include nieces and 
    nephews, a former spouse, any person sharing the employee's household 
    (other than a tenant or employee), and specified family-related trusts, 
    foundations and other entities, as well as the relatives listed in the 
    definition as originally proposed;
         Make Form S-8 available to former employees for the 
    exercise of transferable, as well as non-transferable, options; and
         Revise executive compensation disclosure requirements to 
    clarify how options and stock appreciation rights (``SARs'') that have 
    been transferred should be reported.
        We also adopt amendments to Form S-3 to make that form equally 
    available for the offer and sale of securities underlying both warrants 
    and options, in each case whether or not the securities are 
    transferable.
    
    II. Abuses of Form S-8
    
    A. Consultants and Advisors Eligible for Form S-8 Transactions
    
    1. General
        To prevent further abuse of Form S-8 as a vehicle to make 
    unregistered securities distributions to the general public and to 
    register securities issued to stock promoters, we are amending the 
    instructions to Form S-8 \18\ and the Securities Act definition of 
    ``employee benefit plan.'' \19\ Currently, the instructions to Form S-8 
    allow the form to be used only to register the offer and sale of an 
    issuer's securities to the issuer's employees (or employees of its 
    parents or subsidiaries) under an employee benefit plan. The Form S-8 
    definition of ``employee'' and the Securities Act definition of 
    ``employee benefit plan'' both permit participation by a consultant or 
    advisor who provides bona fide services to the issuer other than in 
    connection with the offer or sale of securities in a capital-raising 
    transaction. In response to telephone
    
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    inquiries, the staff has interpreted these standards to preclude the 
    issuance of securities on Form S-8 to consultants or advisors either:
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        \18\ General Instruction A.1(a).
        \19\ Securities Act Rule 405.
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         As compensation for any service that directly or 
    indirectly promotes or maintains a market for the issuer's securities; 
    or
         As conduits for distributing securities to the general 
    public.
        The staff also has stated that a consultant or advisor must be a 
    natural person, the consulting contract must be between the issuer and 
    this natural person, and the issuer must issue the securities directly 
    to this natural person.\20\
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        \20\ See Image Entertainment (Mar. 6, 1992). However, where the 
    consultant or advisor performs services for the issuer through a 
    wholly-owned corporate alter ego, the issuer may contract with, and 
    register securities on Form S-8 as compensation to, that corporate 
    entity. See Aaron Spelling Productions, Inc. (July 1, 1987).
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        Despite these express limitations, some issuers improperly have 
    taken advantage of the abbreviated disclosure requirements and 
    automatic effectiveness of Form S-8 \21\ (and the related absence of 
    staff review) to register securities that are issued in capital-raising 
    transactions. In these cases, a company issues shares registered on 
    Form S-8 to purported employees or other nominees, designated as 
    ``consultants'' or ``advisors,'' who often do not provide any services 
    to the company that properly may be compensated with securities 
    registered on Form S-8. By prearrangement, these nominees resell the 
    shares on an unregistered basis, remitting the proceeds to the company 
    or its affiliates, or using them to pay the company's expenses. These 
    unregistered resales deprive the real public purchasers of the 
    protections of Securities Act registration. Some companies have 
    repeated this process through a series of Forms S-8, distributing a 
    significant percentage--if not most--of the company's outstanding 
    shares in this manner.\22\
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        \21\ Under Rule Securities Act 462(a) [17 CFR 230.462(a)], a 
    Form S-8 registration statement becomes effective as soon as it is 
    filed with the Commission. Under Rule 464(a) [17 CFR 230.464 (a)], a 
    post-effective amendment filed on Form S-8 also becomes effective 
    upon filing.
        \22\ See, e.g., In the Matter of Sky Scientific, Inc. (``Sky 
    Scientific''), Securities Act Release No. 7372, Exchange Act Release 
    No. 38049, Accounting and Auditing Enforcement Release No. 863 (Dec. 
    16, 1996), in which the company conducted an unregistered 
    distribution to the public by misusing 106 registration statements 
    and post-effective amendments on Form S-8, distributing 
    approximately 30 million shares of common stock.
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        In distributing securities to the public on the issuer's behalf, 
    these consultants or employees act as ``underwriters.'' \23\ The Form 
    S-8 registration statement registers only offers and sales of 
    securities to the company's employees and consultants or advisors. But 
    the securities issued to these people do not come to rest. Instead, 
    these people act as conduits for unregistered offers and sales of 
    securities to the public for which no exemption is available.\24\ In 
    these circumstances, we have charged both issuers and consultants 
    acting as nominees with violating Sections 5(a) and 5(c) of the 
    Securities Act.\25\ We also have charged violations of the antifraud 
    provisions of the Securities Act and the Exchange Act \26\ for 
    misrepresentations in the Form S-8 that the securities are issued as 
    compensation for consulting services rather than to raise capital for 
    the issuer.\27\
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        \23\ ``Underwriter'' is defined in Section 2(a)(11) of the 
    Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(11)] to include ``any person who 
    has purchased from an issuer with a view to, or offers or sells for 
    an issuer in connection with, the distribution of any security, or 
    participates or has a direct or indirect participation in any such 
    undertaking, or participates or has a participation in the direct or 
    indirect underwriting of any such undertaking. . . .''
        \24\ In particular, the ``resale'' exemption of Securities Act 
    Section 4(1) [15 U.S.C. 77d(1)] for ``any person other than an 
    issuer, underwriter or dealer'' is not available because these 
    nominees act as underwriters, as explained above.
        \25\ See, e.g., Sky Scientific, cited at n. 22 above; Spectrum, 
    cited at n. 11 above; and Hollywood Trenz, cited at n. 11 above. See 
    also SEC v. Charles O. Huttoe, et al. (``Huttoe''), Litigation 
    Release No. 15153 (Nov. 7, 1996).
        \26\ Section 17(a) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77q(a)], 
    Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. 78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 
    thereunder [17 CFR 240.10b-5].
        \27\ See, e.g., SEC v. Softpoint, Inc., cited at n. 12 above; 
    and Hollywood Trenz, cited at n. 11 above.
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        Issuers also have misused Form S-8 to register securities issued to 
    consultants and advisors as compensation for their services as stock 
    promoters. Public investors who purchase these securities in effect 
    compensate promoters for their services to the issuer, which sometimes 
    include the dissemination of material fraudulent information. These 
    transactions are outside the scope of transactions permitted to be 
    registered on Form     S-8.
        To deter these abuses of Form S-8, we proposed to include in the 
    Form S-8 instruction regarding consultant and advisor eligibility 
    further restrictions on compensable consulting services. We proposed to 
    require a consultant or advisor to provide the registrant bona fide 
    services that do not directly or indirectly promote or maintain a 
    market for the registrant's securities. This would be in addition to 
    the existing limitation that consultant services may not be in 
    connection with the offer and sale of securities in a capital-raising 
    transaction. To preclude the use of consultant entities as 
    underwriters, we also proposed to codify the requirement that a 
    consultant or advisor must be a natural person who contracts directly 
    with the registrant. We proposed parallel amendments to the Securities 
    Act definition of ``employee benefit plan,'' so that the standards for 
    consultant participation would be uniform. We are adopting these 
    proposals, modified slightly as described below.\28\
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        \28\ Today we also adopt a similar amendment to Securities Act 
    Rule 701 [17 CFR 230.701], the Securities Act exemption for offers 
    and sales of securities by non-reporting companies as employee 
    compensation.
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        While commenters agreed that these proposed amendments could help 
    deter the abusive use of Form S-8, they asked us to provide 
    interpretive guidance to assist issuers in determining what consultant 
    services properly may be compensated with securities registered on Form 
    S-8. Commenters were particularly concerned that a broad range of 
    legitimate financial consultants whose services do not involve 
    underwriting, market making or stock promotion would be precluded from 
    using Form S-8. In this release we provide interpretive guidance to 
    issuers, and also rewrite the current requirements to put them in plain 
    English.
        We agree with commenters that it should not matter if the 
    consulting contract is with an entity or a natural person, as long as 
    the securities registered are issued to the natural persons working for 
    the consulting entity who provide bona fide services to the issuer. 
    Where the securities are issued to these persons, contracting with a 
    consulting entity would not abuse Form S-8. We have revised the 
    amendments to eliminate the proposed requirement that issuers contract 
    only with natural persons, while retaining the requirement that the 
    securities must be issued to natural persons.\29\
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        \29\ However, in the limited circumstance where a consultant or 
    advisor performs services for the issuer through a wholly-owned 
    corporate alter ego, we will continue to permit issuers to register 
    on Form S-8 securities issued as compensation to that corporate 
    entity. See Aaron Spelling Productions, cited at n. 20 above.
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        As adopted, the amended Form S-8 instruction and the parallel 
    amendment to the Rule 405 definition of ``employee benefit plan'' 
    permit consultants and advisors to be treated like employees only if:
         The consultants and advisors are natural persons;
    
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         The consultants and advisors provide bona fide services to 
    the registrant; and
         The services provided by the consultants and advisors are 
    not in connection with the offer or sale of securities in a capital-
    raising transaction, and do not directly or indirectly promote or 
    maintain a market for the registrant's securities.
    2. Interpretive Guidance
        Following adoption of these amendments, we will continue to take 
    the view that Form S-8 is not available to register offers and sales of 
    securities to either traditional employees or consultants and advisors 
    where:
         By prearrangement or otherwise, the issuer or a promoter 
    controls or directs the resale of the securities in the public market; 
    \30\ or
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        \30\ This test focuses on the issuer's power to make a resale 
    happen, or to make it happen at a particular time. This test is not 
    directed at, and is not intended to foreclose, an issuer's ability 
    to prevent resales from happening for a specified period of time, 
    such as through traditional restrictive legends.
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         The issuer or its affiliates directly or indirectly 
    receive a percentage of the proceeds from such resales.\31\
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        \31\ This test will be satisfied where the issuer or its 
    affiliates receive an economic benefit from the resale proceeds, 
    such as when the proceeds are used to pay the issuer's operating 
    expenses or are paid to the issuer's control persons.
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        In other circumstances, Form S-8 will remain available to register 
    securities issued as compensation for the services of traditional 
    employees, without regard to the specific character of the service. 
    However, as to consultants and advisors, the character of the service 
    provided will determine whether Form S-8 is available, as described 
    below. Brokers, dealers and persons who find investors will be excluded 
    from receiving securities registered on Form S-8 because their 
    services, as securities industry professionals, are inherently capital-
    raising. Consultants who provide investor relations or shareholder 
    communications services also will be excluded, because of the 
    promotional nature of their services.
        We also will interpret the amendments to prohibit the issuance of 
    securities registered on Form S-8 to persons who arrange or effect 
    mergers that take private companies public. For example, a merger into 
    a thinly capitalized ``shell'' company with a class of securities 
    registered under the Exchange Act, or a subsidiary of such a company, 
    will fall into this category. These mergers commonly are used to 
    develop a market for the merged entity's securities, often as part of a 
    scheme to ``pump and dump'' those securities. Persons who arrange ``put 
    together'' mergers, in which the consolidation of numerous businesses 
    is conditioned on the combined entity's going public, also will be 
    precluded from being compensated with securities registered on Form S-
    8.
        The prohibition relating to services that directly or indirectly 
    promote or maintain a market for securities is aimed at services that 
    may reasonably be expected to raise (or sustain) the market price of 
    the registrant's securities. For example, persons who hype the issuer's 
    securities in an Internet newsletter, or otherwise publish or 
    disseminate information that reasonably may be expected to influence 
    the price of the issuer's securities, must not be compensated with Form 
    S-8 registered securities, whether or not receipt of compensation from 
    the issuer is disclosed.\32\
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        \32\ Section 17(b) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77q(b)] 
    makes it unlawful to publish any communication describing a security 
    (whether or not the publication offers the security) where the 
    publishing party receives payment from the issuer, an underwriter or 
    dealer, without fully disclosing that such payment has been (or will 
    be) received and the amount paid.
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        Consultants who publish legitimate scientific or medical research 
    in publications generally circulated only within the scientific or 
    medical community typically will not run afoul of this prohibition. 
    However, consultants who circulate this kind of research to a broader 
    audience in a manner reasonably expected to raise or sustain the market 
    price of the registrant's securities may not be compensated with Form 
    S-8 registered securities. Similarly, consultants who provide product 
    or corporate image advertising usually will be able to receive Form S-8 
    registered securities. However, whether activities that nominally 
    promote the issuer's products or image have the purpose or effect of 
    promoting or maintaining a market for the issuer's securities would 
    depend on the facts and circumstances. The more the services reflect 
    traditional advertising practices, the more likely they are to be 
    viewed as product-oriented.
        The revised instruction will not prevent all financial consultants 
    from being compensated with securities registered on Form S-8. Instead, 
    eligibility will depend on the specific character of the services 
    provided. For example, business development consultants retained to 
    identify another company as a potential partner for technology 
    development may be compensated with securities registered on the form. 
    A consultant who advises the issuer on business strategy or 
    compensation policies also will be eligible. A consultant who arranges 
    a bank credit line for the issuer similarly will be eligible. In 
    contrast, a consultant who arranges a financing that involves any 
    securities issuance--whether equity or debt--will not be eligible.
        Whether a consultant retained to perform management functions 
    traditionally performed by an employee, such as a consultant chief 
    financial officer, is eligible will not be determined based on the 
    person's title. Instead, eligibility will depend on the primary 
    character of the services provided. Where the services are primarily 
    capital-raising or promotional, Form S-8 will not be available to 
    register securities issued as compensation.
        The independence requirements of generally accepted auditing 
    standards (``GAAS'') effectively prohibit accountants who audit the 
    issuer's financial statements from receiving the issuer's securities as 
    compensation for their services.\33\
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        \33\ Rule 2-01 of Regulation S-X [17 CFR 210.2-01], and AICPA 
    Interpretation 101-1 of Statement of Auditing Standards No. 1.
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        Attorneys \34\ who represent an issuer in matters that are not 
    related to its securities, such as litigation defense, securing U.S. 
    Food and Drug Administration approval of a drug, or obtaining a patent, 
    will be eligible. Attorneys who prepare the issuer's Exchange Act 
    reports and proxy statement will be eligible whether or not these 
    documents are incorporated into a Securities Act registration 
    statement. However, any consultant or advisor, including an attorney, 
    who prepares or circulates an Exchange Act report or proxy statement 
    that is part of a promotional scheme that violates federal securities 
    laws will not be eligible.
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        \34\ The discussion of attorneys in this section refers to 
    attorneys in law firms engaged by the issuer, not to ``in-house 
    counsel,'' who would be employees of the issuer.
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        Attorneys serving as counsel to the issuer, its underwriters or any 
    participating broker-dealer in a securities offering will not be 
    eligible. Attorneys and other consultants who assist an issuer in 
    identifying acquisition targets, or in structuring mergers or other 
    acquisitions in which securities are issued as consideration, will be 
    eligible, unless the acquisition takes a private company public, as 
    described above.
    3. Harmonization With Rule 701
        Consultants and advisors also may be issued securities under Rule 
    701, the Securities Act exemption for offers and
    
    [[Page 11107]]
    
    sales of securities by non-reporting companies as employee 
    compensation. In the Proposing Release, we stated that we were 
    considering interpreting ``consultants and advisors'' for Rule 701 
    purposes in the narrower manner we traditionally have interpreted these 
    terms for Form S-8 eligibility, and requested comment about 
    interpreting the terms consistently for both purposes. As stated in 
    today's release adopting amendments to Rule 701,\35\ we are concerned 
    that Rule 701 also may become subject to abuse once Form S-8 is 
    amended.\36\ Accordingly, the amended Form S-8 instructions and the 
    interpretations described above will apply equally for purposes of both 
    regulations.\37\ However, issuers may continue to use securities 
    registered on Form S-8, or issued under Rule 701, to compensate persons 
    who have a de facto employment relationship with them. Such a 
    relationship may exist where a person not employed by a company 
    provides the company with bona fide services \38\ that traditionally 
    are performed by an employee, and the compensation paid by the company 
    for those services is the primary source of the person's earned 
    income.\39\
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        \35\ Securities Act Release No. 33-7645 (Feb. 25, 1999) (``Rule 
    701 Adopting Release'').
        \36\ Securities issued under Rule 701 are ``restricted 
    securities,'' as defined in Securities Act Rule 144(a)(3) [17 CFR 
    230.144(a)(3)]. However, 90 days after a Rule 701 issuer becomes 
    subject to the reporting requirements of the Exchange Act, Rule 
    701(c)(3) lifts the Rule 144 current public information, holding 
    period, volume and notice restrictions for non-affiliates--and the 
    holding period restriction for affiliates--who wish to resell the 
    securities.
        \37\See Section II.D of the Rule 701 Adopting Release.
        \38\ These services must not be in connection with the offer or 
    sale of securities in a capital-raising transaction, and must not 
    directly or indirectly promote or maintain a market for the issuer's 
    securities.
        \39\ See Foundation Health Corporation (Jul. 12, 1993), which 
    permitted registration on Form S-8 of stock underlying benefit plan 
    options granted to physicians employed by an affiliated professional 
    corporation to provide medical services at the registrant's HMO, 
    where the company had the right to require the physicians to provide 
    medical services exclusively at the HMO.
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    4. Insurance Agents
        We also asked in the Proposing Release if Form S-8 eligibility for 
    insurance agents should continue to be limited to exclusive agents, or 
    if non-exclusive insurance agents also should be permitted to use the 
    form. We are persuaded that any insurance agent who derives more than 
    50% of his or her annual income from the issuer should be permitted to 
    receive securities issued under Form S-8, whether or not the agency 
    relationship is exclusive.\40\ Agents who depend on the issuer for this 
    percentage of their income are likely to possess sufficient information 
    about the issuer whose insurance products they sell to justify reliance 
    on the abbreviated disclosure of Form S-8. We have amended Form S-8 
    accordingly.\41\
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        \40\ Whether an insurance agent satisfies this income test can 
    be determined by reference to the agent's most recent income tax 
    return.
        \41\ See General Instruction A.1(a)(2) to Form S-8, as revised. 
    We also have amended Rule 701 in the same manner.
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    B. Requirement as to Proper Securities Act Form
    
        Securities Act Rule 401(g) provides that any registration statement 
    or amendment is deemed filed on the proper form unless the Commission 
    objects to the use of the form before the effective date. The rule 
    requires the Commission and the registrant to resolve whether a filing 
    is on the appropriate form before effectiveness. Use of the proper form 
    is important because the disclosure requirements of different forms are 
    tailored for the particular transactions that we designed the forms to 
    register. In some cases, registration on a form other than the form 
    prescribed for the specific transaction may deprive public investors of 
    the disclosure benefits of Securities Act registration.
        Because we have no opportunity to object in a timely manner to the 
    improper use of Form S-8 and other forms that become effective 
    immediately upon filing,\42\ we proposed to amend Rule 401(g) so that 
    all registration statements and post-effective amendments that become 
    effective automatically upon filing would be excluded from its 
    scope.\43\ Although significant abuses in this area appear to have been 
    limited to Form S-8, we did not limit the proposed amendment to Form S-
    8, in order to deter abuse involving other automatically effective 
    forms.
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        \42\ Securities Act Rule 462 [17 CFR 230.462] makes the 
    following registration statements effective immediately upon filing: 
    (a) Rule 462(a) covers Forms S-3 and F-3 for dividend and interest 
    reinvestment plans, and Form S-8; (b) Rule 462(b) covers 
    registration statements filed in specified limited circumstances to 
    increase by no more than 20% the number of shares of the same class 
    previously registered for the same offering, and post-effective 
    amendments to those registration statements; (c) Rule 462(c) covers 
    post-effective amendments filed in specified limited circumstances 
    to provide only price-related information omitted from the 
    registration statement in reliance on Rule 430A; and (d) Rule 462(d) 
    covers post-effective amendments filed solely to add exhibits. Where 
    the issuer continues to meet the requirements for filing on the 
    appropriate form, Rule 464 [17 CFR 230.464] makes effective upon 
    filing post-effective amendments on Form S-8; Forms S-3, F-2 and F-3 
    relating to dividend or interest reinvestment plans; and Form S-4 
    [17 CFR 239.25] (if filed in reliance on General Instruction G to 
    that form).
        \43\ Securities Act Rules 485(b) [17 CFR 230.485(b)] and 486(b) 
    [17 CFR 230.486(b)] make investment company registration statements 
    and post effective amendments effective immediately upon filing. 
    These registration statements and post-effective amendments are not 
    affected by the amendment to Rule 401(g).
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        We are adopting the amendment to Rule 401(g) as proposed. As a 
    result, issuers will bear the risk of assuring that automatically 
    effective registration statements are filed on the proper form. Where a 
    form that is available solely for a specified purpose is used for a 
    different type of transaction, the registration may not be valid. Where 
    a registration statement is filed on a form that is available only for 
    the offer and sale of securities to a class of persons other than the 
    persons to whom the securities are actually offered and/or sold, we 
    will, in appropriate cases, continue to assert that the securities are 
    offered and sold in violation of Section 5.\44\
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        \44\ See, e.g., Sky Scientific, cited at n. 22 above; Spectrum, 
    cited at n. 11 above; Hollywood Trenz, cited at n. 11 above; and 
    Huttoe, cited at n. 25 above.
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    C. Remaining Proposals and Requests for Comment
    
        To prevent the use of consultants and advisors as conduits for 
    unregistered public offerings, we proposed to amend Part II of Form S-8 
    to require an issuer to name any consultants or advisors to whom 
    securities will be sold under the registration statement, specify the 
    number of securities to be issued to each of these persons, and 
    describe specifically the services that each of these persons will 
    provide to the issuer. As proposed, this information would need to be 
    filed by post-effective amendment before the securities are sold to the 
    consultants or advisors if the information was not available when the 
    Form S-8 originally was filed. This proposal was designed to discourage 
    the use of Form S-8 as a vehicle for making unregistered distributions 
    and to permit objective verification that the services are bona fide, 
    non-capital-raising and non-promotional services that legitimately may 
    be compensated with securities registered on Form S-8.
        In addition to (or as alternatives to) this proposed Part II 
    disclosure, we requested comment:
         Whether issuers should be required to disclose Form S-8 
    issuances of securities to consultants in their
    
    [[Page 11108]]
    
    Exchange Act reports--either in Forms 10-K and 10-Q, or on Form 8-K; 
    \45\ and
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        \45\ 17 CFR 249.310, 17 CFR 249.308a, and 17 CFR 249.308, 
    respectively.
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         Whether issuers should be required to file consulting and 
    advisory contracts as exhibits to Form S-8.
        We also requested comment on whether the proposed Part II 
    disclosure would effectively combat the problem, and whether this 
    disclosure would be unduly burdensome.
        Commenters divided in their assessment of the potential 
    effectiveness of the proposed Part II (and/or Exchange Act) disclosure 
    proposal. While some agreed that it would have a chilling effect on the 
    use of consultants as underwriters, others expressed skepticism that 
    violators who are not deterred by the existing requirements would be 
    deterred by the proposed disclosure requirements.
        Most commenters suggested that the proposed disclosure could cause 
    potential competitive harm to legitimate registrants that would 
    outweigh the proposal's prospects for preventing abuse of Form S-8. In 
    particular, the proposals to disclose the identity of consultants and 
    the specific services they provide could require issuers to reveal to 
    competitors critical information concerning their business strategy. 
    Commenters also stated that the proposal to disclose the number of 
    securities issued could cause issuers competitive harm by permitting 
    competitors who seek the named consultants' services to design more 
    attractive incentive packages.\46\
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        \46\ Commenters also objected that disclosure of the number of 
    securities issued would violate legitimate consultants' privacy.
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        Further, commenters stated that the proposal would impose excessive 
    burdens and costs, particularly for issuers who conduct a significant 
    portion of their business through legitimate consultants and use 
    securities to pay for their services, because these issuers would 
    continually be filing post-effective amendments to make the required 
    disclosure. Commenters opposed a requirement to file consulting 
    contracts as exhibits because of confidentiality concerns, noting that 
    the Commission can obtain these contracts as supplemental information 
    upon request under Securities Act Rule 418.\47\
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        \47\ 17 CFR 230.418.
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        We do not adopt today, but instead defer for further consideration, 
    the Part II disclosure proposal and the related comment request 
    regarding Exchange Act disclosure of Form S-8 issuances to consultants 
    and advisors. However, we have decided not to adopt a requirement to 
    file all consulting and advisory contracts as exhibits to Form S-8. In 
    announcing this decision, we remind issuers that, in the absence of an 
    exhibit requirement, issuers remain obligated to furnish these 
    agreements as supplemental information to the Commission staff promptly 
    upon request under Securities Act Rule 418.\48\
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        \48\ See Proposing Release at n. 37. Companies also must 
    consider whether they are required to file these contracts as 
    ``material contract'' exhibits to other filings, as required by Item 
    601(b)(10) of Regulations S-B and S-K. [17 CFR 228.601(b)(10) and 
    229.601(b)(10)].
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        Other potential amendments that we did not propose, but requested 
    comment on, were:
         Whether the aggregate percentage of securities that may be 
    sold to consultants and advisors on Form S-8 during the registrant's 
    fiscal year should be limited to a particular percentage of the number 
    of securities of the same class outstanding;
         Whether the existing requirement that the registrant 
    certify ``that it has reasonable grounds to believe that it meets all 
    of the requirements for filing on Form S-8'' should be expanded also to 
    require certification that any consultant or advisor who receives 
    securities registered on the form is not hired for capital-raising or 
    promotional activities; and
         Whether the Form S-8 cover page should include a box that 
    the registrant would be required to check if any of the securities 
    registered will be offered and sold to consultants and advisors.
        Commenters were divided in their assessment of these other 
    potential amendments. Commenters representing high technology companies 
    expressed particular concern that any ``cap'' on the amount of 
    securities that may be issued to consultants and advisors on Form S-8 
    would arbitrarily interfere with companies' ability to conduct their 
    business in the most economically efficient manner. While some 
    commenters endorsed an expanded certification as a means of reminding 
    issuers of their responsibility for compliance, others questioned 
    whether it would be more effective than the existing certification 
    requirement. Although most commenters did not object to checking a box, 
    some questioned its usefulness. They pointed out that many plans are 
    drafted broadly to permit issuances to consultants, but securities may 
    not actually be issued to consultants immediately, if at all.
        In the companion release issued today, we have extended the comment 
    period on these items. We will continue to consider them while we 
    request comment on the new proposal and new solicitations of comment 
    set forth in the companion release. We may adopt any combination of the 
    Part II (and/or Exchange Act) disclosure proposal, the other potential 
    amendments described in the Proposing Release (other than a requirement 
    to file consulting and advisory contracts as an exhibit to Form S-8), 
    the new proposal and the new comment solicitations.
    
    III. Transferable Options and Proxy Reporting
    
    A. Form S-8 Availability for Family Member Transferees
    
    1. General
        We are adopting amendments to Form S-8 to make it available for the 
    exercise of employee benefit plan stock options by an employee's family 
    member who acquires the options from the employee through a gift or a 
    domestic relations order. The amendments reflect the view that 
    streamlined registration on Form   S-8 should be available for these 
    transactions, as well as transactions with employees, because of their 
    compensatory character and access to information about the issuer 
    flowing from the employment relationship. The eligibility standard that 
    an issuer may use Form S-8 only if it is required to file Exchange Act 
    reports provides a further safeguard.
        These amendments also are consistent with the 1996 amendments to 
    the rules under Section 16 of the Exchange Act.\49\ In particular, the 
    Section 16 amendments eliminated the requirement of former Rule 16b-3 
    that a derivative security issued under an employee benefit plan be 
    non-transferable.\50\ Another amendment simplified transfers of 
    securities to a former spouse in divorce proceedings.\51\ These changes 
    have made the issuance of transferable options more attractive and more 
    common.
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        \49\ These amendments were adopted in Exchange Act Release No. 
    37260 (May 31, 1996) [61 FR 30376].
        \50\ Former Exchange Act Rule 16b-3(a)(2) provided that the 
    exemption was not available for derivative securities that were 
    transferable, except for transfers (i) by will or the laws of 
    descent and distribution, or (ii) pursuant to a qualified domestic 
    relations order as defined by the Internal Revenue Code.
        \51\ Exchange Act Rule 16a-12 [17 CFR 240.16a-12] makes the 
    acquisition or disposition of equity securities through a domestic 
    relations order exempt from both the reporting requirements of 
    Section 16(a) and the short-swing profit recovery requirements of 
    Section 16(b).
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        For purposes of defining transferees eligible to exercise options 
    on Form     S-8, we proposed to define ``family member'' the same way 
    as Exchange Act Rule 16a-1(e) \52\ defines ``immediate
    
    [[Page 11109]]
    
    family.'' \53\ This definition includes any child, stepchild, 
    grandchild, parent, stepparent, grandparent, spouse, sibling, mother-
    in-law, father-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, brother-in-law, or 
    sister-in-law, including adoptive relationships. In addition, the Form  
       S-8 definition of ``family member'' as proposed included trusts for 
    the exclusive benefit of these persons, and any other entity owned 
    solely by these persons.\54\
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        \52\ 17 CFR 240.16a-1(e).
        \53\ Rule 16a-1(a)(2)(ii)(A) [17 CFR 240.16a-1(a)(2)(ii)(A)] 
    provides that a Section 16 insider has an indirect pecuniary 
    interest in securities held by members of the insider's immediate 
    family (as defined in Rule 16a-1(e)) sharing the same household.
        \54\ Rule 16a-1(e) does not include these entities. Instead, 
    whether an insider has a pecuniary interest in securities held by a 
    trust or other entity is determined by reference to Rules 16a-8(b) 
    [17 CFR 240.16a-8(b)] and 16a-1(a)(2), respectively.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As described in greater detail below, we are adopting our proposal 
    with some modifications to expand Form S-8 availability to an 
    employee's family members for the exercise of transferable employee 
    benefit plan options.\55\ In doing so, however, we want to emphasize 
    that this rule change does not require any issuer to permit options to 
    be transferred in this manner. Any decision whether to permit option 
    transfers remains entirely at the discretion of each individual 
    issuer.\56\ We also have restated the amended instruction in plain 
    English, so that it is easier to understand.
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        \55\ Because option exercises by an employee's family member 
    transferees will be permitted on Form S-8, these exercises also will 
    be allowed on a ``cashless exercise'' basis pursuant to Federal 
    Reserve System Regulation T. See 12 CFR 220.3(e)(4).
        \56\ In making this decision, we believe that issuers will 
    consider, among other things, Rev. Rul. 98-21, which states that the 
    transfer of an unvested option is not a completed gift for gift tax 
    purposes until vesting has occurred. 1998-18 I.R.B. 7 (May 4, 1998). 
    Typically, this means that the gift will not be complete until the 
    employee has performed additional service for the issuer. Issuers 
    also may consider Rev. Proc. 98-34, which provides a safe harbor for 
    valuing options. 1998-18 I.R.B. 15 (May 4, 1998).
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    2. Permissible Transferees
        We asked commenters whether any other relatives, such as nieces and 
    nephews, should be added to the Form S-8 definition of ``family 
    member,'' particularly to facilitate estate planning transactions. If 
    so, we asked whether the same relatives should be added to the Rule 
    16a-1(e) ``immediate family'' definition. Amending Rule 16a-1(e) this 
    way would result in a Section 16 insider being deemed to have an 
    indirect pecuniary interest in securities held by these relatives if 
    the relatives share the insider's household.\57\
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        \57\ Rule 16a-1(a)(2)(ii)(A).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Commenters responded that nieces and nephews are frequent and 
    appropriate beneficiaries of testamentary bequests and other gifts for 
    whom Form S-8 should be available. In contrast, commenters divided as 
    to whether nieces and nephews should be included within ``immediate 
    family'' for Section 16 purposes.
        We are persuaded that the family relationship to an employee and 
    the compensatory character of the transaction makes the abbreviated 
    disclosure format of Form S-8 suitable for option exercises by nieces 
    and nephews, as well as the other persons included in the proposed 
    definition of ``family member.'' Accordingly, we have included nieces 
    and nephews in the definition of ``family member'' as adopted. However, 
    we are not persuaded that the likelihood of abusive transactions in 
    which insiders realize indirect gains is sufficiently high to include 
    nieces and nephews within the Rule 16a-1(e) definition of ``immediate 
    family.'' As a result, we have not amended Rule 16a-1(e).
        Commenters also expressed concern that former spouses should be 
    included within the ``family member'' definition, particularly because 
    a transfer under a domestic relations order typically is to a former 
    spouse, rather than to a current spouse. We have revised the definition 
    of ``family member'' as adopted to include former spouses. As a result, 
    Form S-8 will be available for exercises of options transferred to a 
    former spouse pursuant to a domestic relations order, or by gift.
        Some commenters expressed other concerns that the proposed 
    definition of ``family member'' was too narrow because it would exclude 
    unrelated persons who are the object of the employee's generosity. 
    Specifically, some commenters argued that no family limitation is 
    necessary in the absence of consideration for the option's transfer. 
    Other commenters suggested that each issuer should be permitted to 
    craft its own definition of ``family members'' for whom Form S-8 would 
    be available to exercise options transferred by gift.
        We are not persuaded that either of these formulations is 
    acceptable, given the history of Form S-8 abuse and the need for 
    objective definitions of permissible offerees to deter future abuse. 
    However, we believe that there is a legitimate need for increased 
    flexibility to facilitate donative transfers of options to persons who 
    are not ``family members'' as proposed. Option exercises by these 
    persons are consistent with the compensatory, non-capital raising 
    purposes of Form S-8. To this end, we have included ``any person 
    sharing the employee's household (other than a tenant or employee)'' in 
    the ``family member'' definition as adopted. Of course, it is up to the 
    issuer to determine whether it wishes to permit transfers to these 
    persons.
        We believe that sharing the employee's household generally will 
    provide the transferee with access to information about the issuer that 
    flows from the employee/optionee's employment relationship. Moreover, 
    the shared household suggests a sufficiently close relationship between 
    the transferee and optionee to presume that the transfer is a bona fide 
    gift,\58\ and not effected as a ruse to evade the registration 
    requirements of the Securities Act.
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        \58\ In addition, when the transferee exercises the option, the 
    employee/optionee will recognize taxable income equal to the excess 
    of the fair market value of the underlying stock over the exercise 
    price. Treas. Reg. 1.83-7(a). At that time, the employer will be 
    entitled to deduct the same amount. Treas. Reg. 1.83-6(a).
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        As proposed, Form S-8 would be available to the ``family member'' 
    of any person who satisfies the Form S-8 definition of ``employee,'' 
    including consultants and advisors. We are persuaded that consultants 
    and advisors should be treated the same as traditional employees for 
    this purpose, as they are for other purposes under Form S-8. In 
    particular, the amendments directed at deterring consultant abuses that 
    we adopt and propose today should relieve concerns that equal treatment 
    for family members of consultants or advisors is not appropriate.
        We requested comment whether trusts that are primarily--rather than 
    solely--for the benefit of family members, and entities that are 
    primarily--rather than solely--owned by family members should be 
    included within the Form S-8 ``family member'' definition. Commenters 
    responded that the wide range of possible estate planning structures 
    providing for remote or contingent interests requires a more flexible 
    standard than exclusive benefit or sole ownership.
        We are persuaded that entities in which family members (or the 
    employee) own more than 50 percent of the voting interests and trusts 
    in which family members have a more than 50 percent beneficial interest 
    should be included within the ``family member'' definition. Where more 
    than 50 percent of an entity's voting interests are owned by family 
    members or the employee, the employee's family retains control over the 
    entity's assets. Where family members have a more than 50 percent 
    beneficial interest in a trust, the donative purpose of the trust is
    
    [[Page 11110]]
    
    primarily for the benefit of the employee's family. The theories of 
    compensatory purpose and access to information make Form S-8 equally 
    appropriate for option exercises by these entities and trusts.
        Regarding the entity standard, we are not specifying any particular 
    type of entity, such as a general partnership, that must be used. Any 
    type of entity will qualify as long as it meets the more than 50 
    percent of the voting interests ownership test. This approach should 
    foster flexibility in estate planning. For example, this standard will 
    permit Form S-8 to be used by family-controlled partnerships, 
    corporations and limited liability corporations. Of course, sales by 
    these entities of the securities received upon exercising the options 
    must qualify for an exemption or be registered under the Securities 
    Act.\59\
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        \59\ As discussed in Section II.A.1 above, the resale exemption 
    of Securities Act Section 4(1) is not available for any person who 
    acts as an underwriter by taking securities from the issuer with a 
    view to their distribution. You also will need to consider whether a 
    ``family member'' is an ``affiliate,'' as defined in Securities Act 
    Rule 144(a)(1) [17 CFR 230.144(a)(1)].
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        We have provided a separate test for foundations, which usually are 
    organized either as corporations or trusts, because anomalous 
    attributes of foundations make the general tests for trusts and other 
    entities not suitable. Because the corporate form generally used by 
    foundations involves a ``membership'' structure rather than a stock 
    structure, the entity test will not be available. Foundations organized 
    as trusts typically will not satisfy the trust test because the 
    beneficial interest will be primarily charitable. Nevertheless, family 
    control of the assets held by foundations, whether formed as trusts or 
    corporations, justifies making Form S-8 equally available for option 
    exercises by these entities. Accordingly, we have included in the 
    definition of ``family member'' a foundation in which family members 
    (or the employee) control the management of assets.\60\
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        \60\ We presume that persons who control the foundation's assets 
    would decide whether and when an option is exercised.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In contrast, theories relying on primary family ownership, control 
    or benefit do not support expanding Form S-8 availability for option 
    exercises by other entities, such as Section 501(c)(3) \61\ charities. 
    Some commenters requested that Form S-8 be made available for exercises 
    of employee benefit plan options transferred by gift to charities. 
    These commenters believed that facilitating transfers to charities 
    would be consistent with the purposes of Form S-8 because option 
    exercises by charities would not raise concerns about use of the form 
    for capital-raising.
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        \61\ 26 U.S.C. 501(c)(3).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        We are not persuaded by this argument. Although an option exercise 
    by a Section 501(c)(3) charity, for example, may not abuse Form S-8 for 
    capital-raising purposes, the charity is not likely to have a pre-
    existing relationship with the issuer that would justify use of the 
    abbreviated Form S-8 disclosure. While we seek to facilitate employees' 
    estate planning through the amendments we adopt today, we must keep in 
    mind that investor protection is our primary objective. To permit 
    entities that are not controlled by, or for the primary benefit of, an 
    employee's family members to exercise options on Form S-8 would suggest 
    that the abbreviated Form S-8 disclosure is adequate for the offer and 
    sale of securities to non-employees generally. As discussed above,\62\ 
    we remain firmly persuaded of the contrary view.
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        \62\ See Section II.A.1, above.
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    3. Permissible Transfers
        As proposed, Form S-8 would be available only if the option is 
    transferred by gift or under a domestic relations order. We believe it 
    is not consistent with the purpose of Form S-8 to allow the form to be 
    used for option exercises when the option is sold by the employee to 
    another party. Accordingly, we have provided that Form S-8 will not be 
    available for the exercise of employee benefit options transferred for 
    value.
        We have modified the amendment as adopted to clarify that:
         Form S-8 is not available for the exercise of options 
    transferred for value;
         A transfer under a domestic relations order in settlement 
    of marital property rights is not a prohibited transfer for value; and
         A transfer to an entity more than fifty percent owned by 
    the optionee's family members in exchange for an interest (such as a 
    limited partnership interest) in that entity is not a prohibited 
    transfer for value.
        As proposed, a family member transferee would not be required to 
    receive the option directly from the employee for Form S-8 to be 
    available. Instead, a subsequent transferee who is a ``family member'' 
    would be able to exercise the option on Form S-8, if he or she received 
    the option by gift or through a domestic relations order from another 
    ``family member'' of the employee.
        Commenters responded favorably to this proposal, noting that it 
    would facilitate estate planning by the direct transferee family 
    member, as well as the employee/optionee. Commenters also stated that 
    issuers should be able to decide for themselves whether the 
    recordkeeping requirements that would flow from permitting subsequent 
    transfers are too burdensome.
        We believe that Form S-8 should be equally available to indirect 
    family member transferees, as long as each transfer of the option is 
    from another family member of the employee/optionee, and either by gift 
    or pursuant to a domestic relations order. Whether the transfer is a 
    direct one from the employee/optionee, or indirect through another 
    ``family member,'' the family member transferee will have a sufficient 
    preexisting relationship with the issuer to justify reliance on the 
    abbreviated Form S-8 disclosure. Of course, by making Form S-8 
    available to these indirect transferees, we are not in any way 
    requiring issuers to permit indirect option transfers. This decision, 
    like the decision to permit any option transfers, remains entirely at 
    the discretion of each issuer.
        We requested comment whether Form S-8 should be available for 
    ``reload'' options \63\ issued directly to family members, following 
    their exercise of transferred employee benefit plan options. Commenters 
    stated that although option plans typically permit the award of options 
    only to employees, consultants and advisors, situations may arise where 
    an issuer decides to authorize the issuance of reload options directly 
    to transferees. Commenters supported Form S-8 availability to family 
    member transferees for reload options issued directly to the 
    transferees.
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        \63\ ``Reload'' options generally are replacement options 
    granted upon the exercise of an earlier-granted option.
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        We believe that the preexisting relationship with the issuer, by 
    virtue of the transferee's membership in the employee/optionee's 
    family, that justifies the adequacy of abbreviated Form S-8 disclosure 
    for the transferee's exercise of the original option applies equally to 
    a reload option. As a result, the amendment will permit the use of Form 
    S-8 for the exercise by family member transferees of reload options 
    that the issuer issues directly to those transferees.
    4. Permitted Transactions by Transferees
        Under the amendment, family member transferees will be treated like 
    employees for all purposes under Form S-8. We have expanded General 
    Instruction A.1(a)(5) to specify resale of the securities underlying 
    transferred
    
    [[Page 11111]]
    
    options as a transaction for which Form S-8 will be available to an 
    employee's ``family member.'' This revision clarifies our intent that 
    under General Instruction C to Form   S-8, the Form S-3 resale 
    prospectus \64\ will be available for:
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        \64\ As part of the Securities Act Reform Release (Securities 
    Act Release No. 7606A (Nov. 13, 1998) [63 FR 67174]), we have 
    proposed a new approach to the registration of resale transactions 
    that would eliminate Form S-3 resale prospectuses entirely, 
    including the Form S-3 resale prospectus provided by General 
    Instruction C to Form S-8. However, the Securities Act Reform 
    Release requests comment whether there are compelling reasons to 
    retain a different resale treatment for employee benefit plan 
    securities that would not apply in other resale contexts. That 
    release does not propose to rescind Form S-8. See Securities Act 
    Reform Release at Section V.A.2.h.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
         The resale by a ``family member'' who is an affiliate of 
    the issuer of securities that were registered on the Form S-8; and
         The resale by a ``family member'' of restricted securities 
    acquired upon the exercise of transferred employee benefit plan options 
    before the Form S-8 was filed.
        Similarly, if the employee/optionee leaves the company before or 
    after the option transfer, Form S-8 will remain available to the 
    ``family member'' for option exercises to the same extent as the form 
    is available to a former employee, including a former consultant.
        Consistent with current staff interpretive positions, registration 
    of shares underlying employee benefit plan options will continue to be 
    permitted at any time before the option is exercised, without regard to 
    when the option becomes exercisable.\65\ This position is a departure 
    from the general requirement that a registration statement must be 
    filed before an option becomes exercisable--the time at which an offer 
    of the underlying security is deemed made--if the exercise will be 
    registered. We have historically based this exception from the general 
    requirement on a policy determination that transactions registered on 
    Form S-8 should be allowed more flexibility because of the unique 
    character of the employee/employer relationship and the compensatory 
    purpose involved.
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        \65\ See Division of Corporation Finance Manual of Publicly 
    Available Telephone Interpretations (July 1997), at Section G 
    (Securities Act Forms), Interpretation No. 61.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    5. Prospectus Delivery and Disclosure of Tax Effects
        The Proposing Release did not address prospectus delivery standards 
    that should apply to option exercises by employees' family members, or 
    whether the Form S-8 prospectus materials should disclose material 
    estate and gift tax consequences of option transfers. However, 
    commenters requested that we provide guidance on these issues. We agree 
    that the applicable requirements should be made clear.
        As to prospectus \66\ delivery generally, we want to clarify that:
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \66\ Instead of disseminating a customary prospectus included in 
    a registration statement, Form S-8 issuers fulfill prospectus 
    delivery obligations by providing plan participants: (1) document(s) 
    containing the plan information required by the form (updated as 
    necessary); and (2) a written statement listing the documents 
    incorporated by reference and advising participants of their 
    availability upon request. Under Securities Act Rule 428(a)(1) [17 
    CFR 230.428(a)(1)], the delivered documents and the documents 
    incorporated by reference constitute a prospectus meeting the 
    requirements of Securities Act Section 10(a) [15 U.S.C. 77j(a)].
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
         An employee transferor will not be required to provide a 
    prospectus to the family member transferee in connection with a 
    transfer by gift or pursuant to a domestic relations order; but
         Existing prospectus delivery requirements that apply to 
    employee optionees will apply equally to family member transferees. 
    Accordingly, the issuer will be required to deliver a prospectus, 
    updated to reflect material changes, to the family member transferee at 
    or before the transferee's exercise of the option.
        Commenters also requested guidance as to on-going requirements to 
    deliver updated prospectus materials to transferees. The same standards 
    would apply as for an employee/optionee:
         The information delivered as a Form S-8 prospectus must be 
    updated in writing in a timely manner to reflect any material changes 
    during any period in which offers or sales are being made.\67\
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        \67\ Rule 428(b)(1)(i). Company information is updated through 
    incorporation by reference to the company's Exchange Act reports and 
    other documents, which the company must make available without 
    charge. See Part I, Item 2 of Form S-8.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
         For plan participants, including option transferees, who 
    already received a prospectus from the issuer, the issuer needs to 
    furnish only the updating material.
         However, the issuer must deliver the basic prospectus as 
    well as all updates to new plan participants, including option 
    transferees. For option transferees, the issuer will provide the basic 
    prospectus at the time of the update rather than the time the employee 
    transfers the option.
        Regarding shareholder communications, an issuer must furnish to all 
    employees participating in a stock option plan (and their transferees) 
    who do not otherwise receive this information all shareholder 
    communications and other reports furnished to shareholders on a 
    continuing basis.\68\
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        \68\ Rule 428(b)(5).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As to the tax consequences of an option transfer, the Form S-8 
    prospectus materials must describe ``the tax effects that may accrue to 
    employees as a result of plan participation.'' \69\ If the Form S-8 
    registers options issued under an employee benefit plan \70\ that 
    permits the options to be transferred, this discussion should address 
    the material estate and gift tax consequences to an employee/optionee 
    of an option transfer.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \69\ Part I, Item 1(f) of Form S-8.
        \70\ As defined in Securities Act Rule 405, ``employee benefit 
    plan'' includes written compensation contracts in addition to 
    traditional plans.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    B. Technical Change to Form S-8 to Allow Registration of Shares 
    Underlying Transferable Options
    
        To permit family member transferees to exercise employee benefit 
    plan options, Form S-8 must be available for the registration of shares 
    to be issued upon exercise of transferable options. Current General 
    Instruction A.1(a) to Form S-8 makes the form available to former 
    employees, and guardians and executors of both current and former 
    employees (collectively, ``former employees''),\71\ for the exercise of 
    non-transferable employee benefit plan stock options and the subsequent 
    sale of the underlying securities, if these exercises and sales are not 
    prohibited under the plan.\72\
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        \71\ Instruction A.1(a) also makes Form S-8 available to former 
    employees for the acquisition of registrant securities through 
    intra-plan transfers among plan funds, to the extent permitted by 
    the specific plan.
        \72\ By its terms, this non-transferability restriction applies 
    only to the exercise of options by former employees. However, 
    issuers often apply it to all Form S-8 optionees, particularly 
    because of the practical difficulties of replacing options when 
    current employees become former employees.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        We proposed to eliminate this non-transferability restriction in 
    its entirety, but requested comment whether the restriction should be 
    lifted only for options that may be transferred to ``family members'' 
    by gift or through a domestic relations order.
        In the interest of providing issuers flexibility and simplifying 
    option plan administration, we are adopting this amendment as proposed. 
    As a result, employee benefit plan options that are transferable to 
    anyone may be registered on Form S-8, but may be exercised on Form S-8 
    only by employees and their
    
    [[Page 11112]]
    
    family members, as defined in the form.\73\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \73\ Issuers no longer will need to rely on the staff's 
    interpretive position in Merrill Lynch & Co., Inc. (May 16, 1996), 
    which permitted former employees to exercise on Form S-8 options 
    transferable only to children, step-children, grandchildren or 
    trusts established for their exclusive benefit, if such options had 
    not been transferred by the original grantees.
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    C. Registration on Form S-3 of Shares Underlying Transferable Warrants 
    or Options
    
        General Instruction I.B.4 to Form S-3 allows issuers to register on 
    Form S-3 the offer and sale of securities to be received upon the 
    exercise of outstanding transferable warrants issued by the same 
    issuer.\74\ As a condition to Form S-3 availability, the Instruction 
    requires that the issuer have sent, within the twelve calendar months 
    before the Form S-3 is filed, specified annual report information to 
    all record holders of the transferable warrants.\75\
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        \74\ Instruction I.B.4 also makes Form S-3 available to register 
    securities offered upon exercise of outstanding rights granted by 
    the same issuer, under dividend or interest reinvestment plans, or 
    upon the conversion of outstanding convertible securities. In each 
    case, these securities may be registered on Form S-3 whether or not 
    the issuer satisfies the $75 million public float test applicable to 
    primary offerings under Instruction I.B.1 to Form S-3.
        \75\ The Instruction refers to the information required by 
    Exchange Act Rule 14a-3(b) and Regulation S-K Items 401 (Directors, 
    Executive Officers, Promoters and Control Persons), 402 (Executive 
    Compensation) and 403 (Security Ownership of Certain Beneficial 
    Owners and Management).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        By interpretation, the staff of the Division of Corporation Finance 
    expressed the view that employee benefit plan options transferred by 
    gift from employees to their immediate family members would be 
    considered ``transferable warrants'' for purposes of Instruction 
    I.B.4.\76\ Upon effectiveness of the amendments adopted today to permit 
    employees' family members to exercise employee benefit plan options on 
    Form S-8, there will be no further need to rely on this 
    interpretation.\77\
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        \76\ Use of Form S-3 for Transferred Options (Aug. 7, 1997). 
    This interpretation applied the definition of ``immediate family'' 
    set forth in Exchange Act Rule 16a-1(e).
        \77\ However, registrants may continue to rely on a related 
    letter, Ropes & Gray (Oct. 30, 1997), which distinguishes procedures 
    for fee transfers in other circumstances. This letter provides 
    generally that a post-effective amendment to the original 
    registration statement (other than a Form S-8) is not necessary to 
    deregister the unsold shares for which the transferred fee 
    originally was paid.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        However, upon considering this interpretation, we proposed to treat 
    options (including options not issued under employee benefit plans) the 
    same as warrants for purposes of Form S-3 availability, in each case 
    without regard to transferability. Commenters were asked to address 
    whether transferability, or differences between an issuer's 
    relationships with option holders and warrant holders, would justify 
    different treatment of the underlying securities for purposes of Form 
    S-3 availability. This issue generated virtually no comment.
        Securities offered pursuant to options, like securities offered 
    pursuant to rights, convertible securities and warrants, are all 
    offered to existing security holders of the issuer, who are presumed to 
    ``follow'' the issuer through corporate communications and Exchange Act 
    filings.\78\ This presumption appears to apply equally to options as 
    well as warrants, in each case without regard to transferability. 
    Accordingly, we are adopting the amendment in the form proposed.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \78\ See Securities Act Release No. 6331 (Aug. 6, 1981). See 
    also the proposed treatment of offerings to existing security 
    holders, including option holders, in Section V.A.2.c of the 
    Securities Act Reform Release.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    D. Executive Compensation Disclosure of Transferred Options
    
        The Proposing Release proposed amendments to (and solicited comment 
    on other potential amendments to) the executive compensation disclosure 
    requirements of Item 402 of Regulations S-K and S-B \79\ to address the 
    reporting treatment of transferred (or transferable) employee benefit 
    plan stock options. These issues arose under the summary compensation 
    table,\80\ the option/SAR grants table,\81\ and the aggregated option/
    SAR exercises and fiscal year-end option/SAR value table.\82\ The 
    amendments adopted today reflect the staff's view that the transfer of 
    an option by an executive does not negate the option's status as 
    compensation that should be reported.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \79\ An issuer must include, or incorporate by reference, this 
    disclosure in Securities Act registration statements filed on Forms 
    S-1 [17 CFR 239.11], S-2, S-3, S-4, S-8, S-11 [17 CFR 239.18] and 
    SB-2 [17 CFR 239.10]. An issuer also must include this disclosure in 
    its Exchange Act registration statement on Form 10 or Form 10-SB 
    [together, 17 CFR 249.210], and its proxy or information statement 
    (if action is to be taken as to the election of directors or the 
    approval of specified director or executive compensation, as 
    provided in Item 8 of Schedule 14A [17 CFR 240.14a-101]). Finally, 
    an issuer must include, or incorporate by reference from its 
    definitive proxy or information statement, this disclosure in its 
    annual report on Form 10-K [17 CFR 249.310] or Form 10-KSB [17 CFR 
    249.310b].
        \80\ Item 402(b) of Regulations S-B and S-K.
        \81\ Item 402(c) of Regulations S-B and S-K.
        \82\ Item 402(d) of Regulations S-B and S-K.
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    1. Summary Compensation Table
        The summary compensation table prescribed by Item 402(b) requires a 
    three-year reporting history of compensation, including the number of 
    securities for which options were granted, for each person serving as 
    the issuer's chief executive officer (the ``CEO'') during the last 
    fiscal year and the four other most highly compensated executive 
    officers serving at the end of that year (together with the CEO, the 
    ``named executive officers''). We proposed to amend this item so that 
    the sum of the number of securities underlying stock options granted 
    required to be reported in column (g) of the table would include 
    options that subsequently were transferred by the named executive 
    officer.
        Commenters considered this proposal appropriate, noting that the 
    compensatory character of the securities reported is not changed if the 
    named executive officer subsequently transfers them. We are adopting 
    this amendment without modification.\83\
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        \83\ Revised Item 402(b)(2)(iv)(B).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        Consistent with the theory that an option retains its compensatory 
    character following transfer, the staff of the Division of Corporation 
    Finance is of the view that reload options issued directly to 
    transferees also should be reported in Item 402 disclosure as new 
    grants, both in the summary compensation table and the option/SAR 
    grants table.
    2. Option/SAR Grants Table
        Among other things, this table must show the number of options 
    granted during the most recent fiscal year to the named executive 
    officers. The table also must provide footnote disclosure of the 
    material terms of those options. We proposed to amend this item so that 
    the information required by the table would apply to all options and 
    SARs granted during the year, including options and SARs that 
    subsequently were transferred.
        Consistent with their reaction to the parallel amendment to the 
    summary compensation table, commenters also considered this amendment 
    appropriate. We are adopting this amendment in the form proposed.\84\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \84\ Revised Item 402(c)(1).
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        In the Proposing Release, we expressed our view that 
    transferability is an option term that should be disclosed in a 
    footnote to this table. While we did not propose a specific amendment 
    to codify this position, we solicited comment whether the item should 
    be amended to include transferability among the material terms 
    requiring footnote disclosure.\85\ Commenters generally did not agree 
    that
    
    [[Page 11113]]
    
    transferability is a material option term that should require footnote 
    disclosure in the option/SAR grant table. In particular, commenters 
    expressed the view that, over time, transferability may become a 
    standard feature of options granted to executives.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \85\ Instruction 3 to Item 402(c) lists the material terms 
    requiring footnote disclosure.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        We believe that transferability should continue to be disclosed in 
    a footnote to this table, since it is not currently a feature of most 
    options, and may be viewed as a special benefit to the employee 
    receiving the option. We are not, however, amending this item to codify 
    a requirement to disclose option transferability in a footnote, since 
    in the future transferability may become a standard option feature.
        We also requested comment whether footnote disclosure should be 
    required to specify the date of any transfer of an option or SAR that 
    has occurred. While some commenters supported this disclosure (and 
    parallel footnote disclosure in the summary compensation table), they 
    did not believe that naming the transferee would provide material 
    information to investors. While some commenters favored disclosing the 
    transferee's status, such as ``immediate family member'' or 
    ``unaffiliated charity,'' others objected to this disclosure, noting 
    that named executive officers are not required to disclose transfers of 
    other elements of their compensation, such as cash or stock.
        We have concluded that the summary compensation table and option/
    SAR grants table should not be amended to require footnote disclosure 
    of subsequent transfers, although such disclosure may be included on a 
    voluntary basis. The purpose of these tables is to disclose the 
    compensation awarded to the named executive officers. While 
    clarification that an award must be reported even if subsequently 
    transferred furthers this purpose, disclosure of an award's subsequent 
    transfer does not. This is because the gain on the exercise of the 
    transferred options, as discussed below, continues to be imputed to the 
    named executive officer for Item 402 disclosure purposes.
    3. Aggregated Option/SAR Exercises and Fiscal Year-End Option/SAR Value 
    Table
        This table must present, among other things, both the option 
    exercises by the named executive officers during the last fiscal year 
    and the value of options held by them at fiscal year end. This value is 
    computed based on the difference between the exercise price of the 
    options and the year-end fair market value of the covered shares.
        Without proposing a specific amendment, we solicited comment 
    whether it is necessary to amend this table so that it includes all 
    option and SAR compensation from which the named executive officer's 
    family members continue to derive benefits. We wanted to know whether 
    such an amendment is needed to ensure that investors continue to 
    receive meaningful disclosure of all option and SAR compensation 
    awarded by the issuer, especially if option and SAR transfers to family 
    members become more common following adoption of our amendments to Form 
    S-8.
        We do not adopt any amendment to this table today. We intend to 
    conduct a general review of the Item 402 disclosure scheme for purposes 
    of evaluating the need for further amendments, and will consider 
    further the comments responsive to the Proposing Release concerning 
    this table in connection with that review.
        In the meantime, the staff of the Division of Corporation Finance 
    continues to answer interpretive questions concerning this table. In 
    the staff's view, a named executive officer is presumed to continue to 
    have a compensatory interest in an option or SAR following its 
    transfer. As a result, an issuer should continue to report in this 
    table options and SARs held or exercised by transferees of named 
    executive officers. Issuers may, but are not required to, include a 
    footnote indicating that the option or SAR is held or was exercised by 
    a transferee.
    
    IV. Transition
    
        The amendments adopted today become effective April 7, 1999 (the 
    ``effective date''), except that currently effective registration 
    statements will be required to comply with certain amendments as of May 
    10, 1999, as discussed below.
        The amendment to Rule 401(g) will apply to all Forms S-8 and other 
    automatically effective registration statements filed on or after the 
    effective date, and all post-effective amendments to those registration 
    statements (including Securities Act Section 10(a)(3) \86\ updates 
    accomplished through incorporation by reference of the registrant's 
    Form 10-K) filed on or after the effective date.\87\
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        \86\ 15 U.S.C. 77j(a)(3).
        \87\ Securities Act Rule 401(b) [17 CFR 230.401(b)] generally 
    requires an amendment filed for purposes of satisfying Section 
    10(a)(3) to conform to the applicable rules and forms in effect on 
    the amendment's filing date.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The amendments to Form S-8 and Rule 405 restricting permissible 
    consultants will apply to Forms S-8 filed initially on or after the 
    effective date. However, currently effective registration statements on 
    Form S-8 will be required to comply with these amendments as of May 10, 
    1999. As a result, any securities issuance on or after May 10, 1999 
    under any currently effective Form S-8 must comply with these 
    amendments.
        The amendments that allow Form S-8 to be used by employees' family 
    members for the exercise of employee benefit plan options transferred 
    by gift or pursuant to a domestic relations order will apply 
    automatically, as of the effective date, to any Form   S-8 registering 
    shares underlying employee benefit plan options, even if the Form S-8 
    became effective before the effective date. It will not be necessary to 
    post-effectively amend these forms for this amendment to apply.
        The amendments to Form S-3 apply to registration statements filed 
    initially on or after the effective date, and to pre-effective 
    amendments filed on or after that date.
        The amendments to Item 402 of Regulations S-K and S-B apply to all 
    Securities Act and Exchange Act documents that include this disclosure 
    filed initially on or after the effective date. Amendments to documents 
    that initially were filed before the effective date need not include 
    the new required disclosure. For example, if preliminary proxy material 
    containing Item 402 disclosure was filed before the effective date, 
    definitive material filed after the effective date need not comply.
    
    V. Cost-Benefit Analysis
    
        As an aid to evaluate the costs and benefits of our proposals, we 
    requested the views of the public and other supporting information. We 
    received no comments in response to these requests. We have concluded 
    that the amendments will not result in an increase in costs or prices 
    for consumers or individual industries, or significant adverse effects 
    on competition, employment, investment, productivity, innovation or 
    small business.
        Some of the amendments are designed to deter the use of Form S-8 to 
    register transactions in which consultants or employees act as conduits 
    to distribute securities to the public, or transactions in which 
    consultants are compensated for other capital-raising or promotional 
    services. This will discourage filers from misusing the form to 
    register transactions for which it is not available. We believe that 
    the elimination of this misuse will benefit investors and enhance their 
    confidence in the integrity of the securities markets.
    
    [[Page 11114]]
    
    Other forms remain available to register securities for these purposes. 
    The forms most likely to be used are Forms S-1, SB-2, S-2 and S-3. The 
    estimated burden hours for using Form S-8 are 12 hours.\88\ The 
    estimated burden hours \89\ for the other forms are:
    
        \88\ The burden hour estimates discussed in this section were 
    developed for purposes of the Paperwork Reduction Act.
        \89\ The estimated burden hours for Form S-8 and Form SB-2 
    assume that only 25% of the total hours spent to prepare the form 
    will be spent by company employees. These estimates assume that the 
    remaining 75% of the total hours will be spent by hired 
    professionals, such as attorneys or accountants. These estimates 
    therefore do not include within the burden hours the remaining 75% 
    of total hours, but instead account for that time as costs. The 
    estimated burden hours for Form     S-2 and S-3 do not follow this 
    convention, but instead account for all estimated hours as burden 
    hours.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    Form SB-2--138
    Form S-3--398
    Form S-2--470
    Form S-1--1290
    
        Because none of these forms becomes effective automatically upon 
    filing, unlike Form S-8, additional costs may be incurred due to the 
    resultant delay. However, we believe that any additional costs of using 
    these other forms are justified in order to provide adequate 
    information to investors.
        Our records indicate that approximately 5600 Forms S-8 were filed 
    during the fiscal year ending September 30, 1998.\90\ We do not have 
    data to determine how many of these filings would have been precluded 
    if the amendments had been in effect. Therefore, we cannot quantify the 
    impact. However, we believe that the rule change will only impact 
    transactions that were not intended to be registered on the form.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \90\ During the same period, 745 post-effective amendments were 
    filed on Form S-8.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The amendment to make Form S-8 available for employee benefit plan 
    option exercises and the subsequent resale of the underlying securities 
    by an employee's family members will reduce costs by eliminating the 
    need to file a different, less streamlined registration form for these 
    transactions. By reducing these costs for issuers, option 
    transferability may become more widespread, allowing families to incur 
    estate tax savings as a result. Because information on intrafamily 
    transfers is not reported and option transferability is a relatively 
    new and limited practice, we do not have data upon which to quantify 
    costs that will be saved by the amendments.
        The amendment to make Form S-3 available for the exercise of 
    options to the same extent as it is available for the exercise of 
    warrants also will reduce costs by making this streamlined registration 
    form available for a broader group of transactions. However, we do not 
    have data for quantifying this effect. The amendments to Item 402 of 
    Regulation S-B and S-K also will not increase costs because they will 
    not require the reporting of any compensatory transactions that are not 
    already required to be reported.
    
    VI. Summary of Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        In accordance with 5 U.S.C. 604, we have prepared a final 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (``FRFA'') regarding the proposed 
    amendments.
        The analysis notes that the amendments to Form S-8 and Rules 401 
    and 405 are designed to deter abusive practices in which Form S-8 is 
    used to make capital-raising distributions of securities to the general 
    public, or to compensate consultants and advisors for promotional and 
    other capital-raising activities. These uses are contrary to the 
    express purposes of the form. Other amendments to Form S-8 and to Item 
    402 of Regulations S-B and S-K result from concerns expressed by 
    representatives of industry that the current limited scope of persons 
    permitted to exercise options under Form S-8 has a chilling effect on 
    intra-family transfers for estate planning and other purposes. The 
    amendments to Form S-3 result from the staff's view that shares 
    underlying options should be treated the same as shares underlying 
    warrants for purposes of form availability. We believe that the 
    amendments will not result in any impairment of protection for the 
    investing public, and should result in improved protection by assuring 
    that capital-raising offerings are registered on the forms prescribed 
    for those offerings.
        As the FRFA describes, the staff is aware of approximately 815 
    Exchange Act reporting companies that currently satisfy the definition 
    of ``small business'' under Rule 157 of the Securities Act.\91\ 
    Overall, 13,577 companies are Exchange Act reporting companies. Based 
    on a random sample of the Forms S-8 filed during fiscal 1998, the 
    Commission estimates that approximately 380 of the 5600 Forms   S-8 
    filed during 1998 were filed by small business issuers, and that 
    consultants or advisors were the sole recipients of securities 
    registered on approximately 185 of the Forms S-8.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \91\ 17 CFR 230.157.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The amendments will not impose any new reporting, recordkeeping or 
    compliance burdens. The amendments designed to deter the abuse of Form  
       S-8 may require some small businesses to use less streamlined forms 
    to register securities offerings that otherwise would have been 
    registered on Form     S-8. In most cases, however, these will be 
    offerings for which Form S-8 was not in fact previously available.
        The amendment to make Form S-8 available for employee benefit plan 
    option exercises and the subsequent resale of the underlying securities 
    by an employee's family members should reduce recordkeeping and 
    compliance burdens for smaller businesses by eliminating the need to 
    file a different, less streamlined registration form for these 
    transactions. While we cannot quantify the number of small businesses 
    that would be affected, the average reporting and recordkeeping burden 
    that will be avoided by eliminating the need to file a different form 
    could be substantially reduced.\92\
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \92\ See the Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis at Section VII, 
    below.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The amendment to make Form S-3 available for the exercise of 
    options to the same extent as it is available for the exercise of 
    warrants will further reduce recordkeeping and compliance burdens by 
    making this streamlined registration form available for a broader group 
    of transactions.
        The amendments to Item 402 of Regulation S-B should not increase 
    recordkeeping and compliance burdens because they will not require 
    reporting of compensatory transactions that are not already required to 
    be reported. Regulation S-K generally does not apply to small issuers.
        As discussed more fully in the FRFA, we considered several possible 
    significant alternatives to the amendments, to minimize effects on 
    small entities. These included: (a) the establishment of different 
    compliance or reporting timetables that take into account the resources 
    available to small entities; (b) the clarification, consolidation, or 
    simplification of compliance and reporting requirements under the rules 
    and forms for small entities; (c) the use of performance rather than 
    design standards; and (d) a partial or complete exemption from coverage 
    of the rules and forms for small entities.
        We invited written comments on any aspect of the Initial Regulatory 
    Flexibility Analysis, but received no specific comments in response to 
    our request. In particular, we sought comment on: (1) the number of 
    small entities that would be affected by the proposed rule amendments; 
    and (2) the determination that the proposed rule
    
    [[Page 11115]]
    
    amendments would reduce reporting, recordkeeping and other compliance 
    requirements for small entities. We received no comments in response to 
    these requests. A copy of the Final Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis 
    may be obtained from Anne M. Krauskopf, Office of Chief Counsel, 
    Division of Corporation Finance, Securities and Exchange Commission, 
    450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549.
    
    VII. Paperwork Reduction Act Analysis
    
        Our staff consulted with the Office of Management and Budget 
    (``OMB'') and submitted the amendments as proposed for review in 
    accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``PRA'').\93\ The 
    title to the affected information collection is: ``Form S-8.'' An 
    agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not required to 
    respond to, a collection of information unless it displays a currently 
    valid control number. This collection of information has been assigned 
    OMB Control No. 3235-0066.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \93\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The amendments designed to deter the abuse of Form S-8 may require 
    some companies to use less streamlined forms to register securities 
    offerings that otherwise would have been registered on Form S-8. In 
    most cases, however, these will be offerings for which Form S-8 was not 
    in fact previously available. We estimate that this may reduce the 
    number of registration statements filed on Form S-8 by approximately 
    one percent.
        The amendments to Form S-8 will permit the form to be used for the 
    exercise of employee benefit plan options and the resale of the 
    underlying securities by family members of employee optionees. By 
    eliminating the need to file different, less streamlined registration 
    statements for these transactions, the amendments may encourage 
    registrants to permit intra-family transfers of employee benefit plan 
    stock options. We believe that, to the extent registrants have filed 
    separate registration statements for option exercises by family member 
    transferees, the form most often used was Form     S-3. The Commission 
    is unable to estimate with certainty the number of Forms   S-3 that 
    have been filed for this purpose, but believes it to be a negligible 
    percentage of the 3827 Forms S-3 filed during the fiscal year ending 
    September 30, 1998. Because option transferability is a relatively new 
    and limited practice, it is difficult to quantify burden hours that 
    will be saved by the proposed amendments. However, by permitting family 
    members' option exercises to be registered on the least burdensome 
    registration form, the amendments should make transferability 
    substantially more attractive. We estimate that this will reduce the 
    number of registration statements filed on Form S-3 by a minimal 
    percentage, but that this reduction will be offset by an increased 
    number of filings on Form S-3 resulting from the amendment to General 
    Instruction I.B.4 to Form S-3.
        This amendment will make Form     S-3 available for the 
    registration of shares underlying options as well as warrants, in each 
    case without regard to transferability. This will allow the 
    registration of additional transactions on Form S-3, a relatively 
    streamlined registration form. While we do not know the number of Forms 
    S-3 filed during fiscal 1998 that were filed in reliance on this 
    instruction, we estimate that it also was a relatively small percentage 
    of the 3827 Forms S-3 filed.
        The OMB received no comments in response to our request for comment 
    regarding the information collection obligation.
    
    VIII. Statutory Basis and Text of Amendments
    
        The amendments to Securities Act Forms S-8 and S-3 and Rules 401(g) 
    and 405 are adopted pursuant to the authority set forth in Sections 6, 
    7, 8, 10 and 19 of the Securities Act. The amendments to Item 402 of 
    Regulations S-B and S-K also are adopted pursuant to Exchange Act 
    Sections 12, 13, 14, 15 and 23.
    
    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Parts 228, 229, 230 and 239
    
        Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
    
    Text of the Amendments
    
        In accordance with the foregoing, Title 17, Chapter II of the Code 
    of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 228--INTEGRATED DISCLOSURE SYSTEM FOR SMALL BUSINESS ISSUERS
    
        1. The authority citation for part 228 continues to read as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77k, 77s, 77z-2, 
    77aa(25), 77aa(26), 77ddd, 77eee, 77ggg, 77hhh, 77jjj, 77nnn, 77sss, 
    78l, 78m, 78n, 78o 78u-5, 78w, 78ll, 80a-8, 80a-29, 80a-30, 80a-37, 
    80b-11, unless otherwise noted.
    
        2. In Sec. 228.402 paragraph (b)(2)(iv) introductory text is 
    republished and paragraphs (b)(2)(iv)(B) and (c)(1) introductory text 
    are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 228.402 (Item 402)  Executive compensation.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (iv) Long-term compensation (columns (f), (g) and (h)), including:
        (A) * * *
        (B) The sum of the number of securities underlying stock options 
    granted (including options that subsequently have been transferred), 
    with or without tandem SARs, and the number of freestanding SARs 
    (column (g)); and
    * * * * *
        (c) Option/SAR grants table. (1) The information specified in 
    paragraph (c)(2) of this item, concerning individual grants of stock 
    options (whether or not in tandem with SARs) and freestanding SARs 
    (including options and SARs that subsequently have been transferred) 
    made during the last completed fiscal year to each of the named 
    executive officers shall be provided in the tabular format specified as 
    follows:
    * * * * *
    
    PART 229--STANDARD INSTRUCTIONS FOR FILING FORMS UNDER SECURITIES 
    ACT OF 1933, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934 AND ENERGY POLICY AND 
    CONSERVATION ACT OF 1975--REGULATION S-K
    
        3. The authority citation for part 229 continues to read in part as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77e, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77k, 77s, 77z-2, 
    77aa(25), 77aa(26), 77ddd, 77eee, 77ggg, 77hhh, 77iii, 77jjj, 77nnn, 
    77sss, 78c, 78i, 78j, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78u-5, 78w, 78ll(d), 79e, 
    79n, 79t, 80a-8, 80a-29, 80a-30, 80a-37, 80b-11, unless otherwise 
    noted.
    * * * * *
        4. In Sec. 229.402 paragraph (b)(2)(iv) introductory text is 
    republished and paragraphs (b)(2)(iv)(B) and (c)(1) introductory text 
    are revised to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 229.402 (Item 402)  Executive compensation.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) * * *
        (2) * * *
        (iv) Long-term compensation (columns (f), (g) and (h)), including:
        (A) * * *
        (B) The sum of the number of securities underlying stock options 
    granted (including options that subsequently have been transferred), 
    with or without tandem SARs, and the number of freestanding SARs 
    (column (g)); and
    * * * * *
    
    [[Page 11116]]
    
        (c) Option/SAR Grants Table. (1) The information specified in 
    paragraph (c)(2) of this item, concerning individual grants of stock 
    options (whether or not in tandem with SARs) and freestanding SARs 
    (including options and SARs that subsequently have been transferred) 
    made during the last completed fiscal year to each of the named 
    executive officers shall be provided in the tabular format specified as 
    follows:
    * * * * *
    
    PART 230--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
    
        5. The authority citation for part 230 continues to read in part as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77r, 77s, 77sss, 
    78c, 78d, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78w, 78ll(d), 79t, 80a-8, 80a-24, 80a-
    28, 80a-29, 80a-30, and 80a-37, unless otherwise noted.
    * * * * *
        6. By amending Sec. 230.401 to revise paragraph (g) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 230.401  Requirements as to proper form.
    
    * * * * *
        (g) Except for registration statements and post-effective 
    amendments that become effective automatically pursuant to 
    Secs. 230.462 and 230.464, a registration statement or any amendment 
    thereto is deemed filed on the proper form unless the Commission 
    objects to the form before the effective date.
        7. By amending Sec. 230.405 to revise the definition of ``Employee 
    benefit plan'' to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 230.405  Definitions of terms.
    
    * * * * *
        Employee benefit plan. The term employee benefit plan means any 
    written purchase, savings, option, bonus, appreciation, profit sharing, 
    thrift, incentive, pension or similar plan or written compensation 
    contract solely for employees, directors, general partners, trustees 
    (where the registrant is a business trust), officers, or consultants or 
    advisors. However, consultants or advisors may participate in an 
    employee benefit plan only if:
        (1) They are natural persons;
        (2) They provide bona fide services to the registrant; and
        (3) The services are not in connection with the offer or sale of 
    securities in a capital-raising transaction, and do not directly or 
    indirectly promote or maintain a market for the registrant's 
    securities.
    * * * * *
    
    PART 239--FORMS PRESCRIBED UNDER THE SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
    
        8. The authority citation for part 239 continues to read in part as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77sss, 78c, 
    78l, 78m, 78n, 78o(d), 78u-5, 78w(a), 78ll(d), 79e, 79f, 79g, 79j, 
    79l, 79m, 79n, 79q, 79t, 80a-8, 80a-24, 80a-29, 80a-30 and 80a-37, 
    unless otherwise noted.
    * * * * *
        9. By amending Sec. 239.13 to revise paragraph (b)(4) to read as 
    follows:
    
    
    Sec. 239.13  Form S-3, for registration under the Securities Act of 
    1933 of securities of certain issuers offered pursuant to certain types 
    of transactions.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Transaction requirements. * * *
        (4) Rights offerings, dividend or interest reinvestment plans, and 
    conversions, warrants and options. (i) Securities to be offered:
        (A) Upon the exercise of outstanding rights granted by the issuer 
    of the securities to be offered, if such rights are granted on a pro 
    rata basis to all existing security holders of the class of securities 
    to which the rights attach;
        (B) Under a dividend or interest reinvestment plan; or
        (C) Upon the conversion of outstanding convertible securities or 
    the exercise of outstanding warrants or options issued by the issuer of 
    the securities to be offered, or an affiliate of that issuer.
        (ii) However, Form S-3 is available for registering these 
    securities only if the issuer has sent, within the twelve calendar 
    months immediately before the registration statement is filed, material 
    containing the information required by Sec. 240.14a-3(b) of this 
    chapter under the Exchange Act to:
        (A) All record holders of the rights;
        (B) All participants in the plans; or
        (C) All record holders of the convertible securities, warrants or 
    options, respectively.
        (iii) The issuer also must have provided, within the twelve 
    calendar months immediately before the Form   S-3 registration 
    statement is filed, the information required by Items 401, 402 and 403 
    of Regulation S-K (Secs. 229.401 through 229.403 of this chapter) to:
        (A) Holders of rights exercisable for common stock;
        (B) Holders of securities convertible into common stock; and
        (C) Participants in plans that may invest in common stock, 
    securities convertible into common stock, or warrants or options 
    exercisable for common stock, respectively.
    * * * * *
        10. By amending Form S-3 (referenced in Sec. 239.13) by revising 
    paragraph B.4 of General Instruction I to read as follows:
    
        Note--The text of Form S-3 does not, and this amendment will 
    not, appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
    
    Form S-3  Registration Statement under the Securities Act of 1933
    
    * * * * *
    General Instructions
    * * * * *
    I. Eligibility Requirements for Use of Form S-3
    * * * * *
        B. Transaction Requirements. * * *
        4. Rights Offerings, Dividend or Interest Reinvestment Plans, and 
    Conversions, Warrants and Options.
        (a) Securities to be offered (1) upon the exercise of outstanding 
    rights granted by the issuer of the securities to be offered, if such 
    rights are granted on a pro rata basis to all existing security holders 
    of the class of securities to which the rights attach, (2) under a 
    dividend or interest reinvestment plan, or (3) upon the conversion of 
    outstanding convertible securities or the exercise of outstanding 
    warrants or options issued by the issuer of the securities to be 
    offered, or an affiliate of that issuer.
        (b) However, Form S-3 is available for registering these securities 
    only if the issuer has sent, within the twelve calendar months 
    immediately before the registration statement is filed, material 
    containing the information required by Rule 14a-3(b) (Sec. 240.14a-3(b) 
    of this chapter) under the Exchange Act to:
        (1) All record holders of the rights,
        (2) All participants in the plans, or
        (3) All record holders of the convertible securities, warrants or 
    options, respectively.
        (c) The issuer also must have provided, within the twelve calendar 
    months immediately before the Form   S-3 registration statement is 
    filed, the information required by Items 401, 402 and 403 of Regulation 
    S-K (Secs. 229.401-229.403 of this chapter) to:
        (1) Holders of rights exercisable for common stock,
        (2) Holders of securities convertible into common stock, and
        (3) Participants in plans that may invest in common stock, 
    securities convertible into common stock, or warrants or options 
    exercisable for common stock, respectively.
    * * * * *
        11. By amending Sec. 239.16b to revise paragraph (a)(1) to read as 
    follows:
    
    [[Page 11117]]
    
    Sec. 239.16b  Form S-8, for registration under the Securities Act of 
    1933 of securities to be offered to employees pursuant to employee 
    benefit plans.
    
    * * * * *
        (a) * * *
        (1) Securities of the registrant to be offered to its employees or 
    employees of its subsidiaries or parents under any employee benefit 
    plan. The form also is available for the exercise of employee benefit 
    plan options by an employee's family member (as defined in General 
    Instruction A.1(a)(5) to Form S-8) who has acquired the options from 
    the employee through a gift or a domestic relations order.
    * * * * *
        12. By amending Form S-8 (referenced in Sec. 239.16b) by revising 
    paragraph 1.(a) of General Instruction A to read as follows:
    
        Note--The text of Form S-8 does not, and this amendment will 
    not, appear in the Code of Federal Regulations.
    
    Form S-8  Registration Statement Under the Securities Act of 1933
    
    * * * * *
    General Instructions
        A. Rule as to Use of Form S-8.
        1. * * *
        (a) Securities of the registrant to be offered under any employee 
    benefit plan to its employees or employees of its subsidiaries or 
    parents. For purposes of this form, the term ``employee benefit plan'' 
    is defined in Rule 405 of Regulation C (para.230.405).
        (1) For purposes of this form, the term ``employee'' is defined as 
    any employee, director, general partner, trustee (where the registrant 
    is a business trust), officer, or consultant or advisor. Form S-8 is 
    available for the issuance of securities to consultants or advisors 
    only if:
        (i) They are natural persons;
        (ii) They provide bona fide services to the registrant; and
        (iii) The services are not in connection with the offer or sale of 
    securities in a capital-raising transaction, and do not directly or 
    indirectly promote or maintain a market for the registrant's 
    securities.
        (2) In addition, the term ``employee'' includes insurance agents 
    who are exclusive agents of the registrant, its subsidiaries or 
    parents, or derive more than 50% of their annual income from those 
    entities.
        (3) The term employees also includes former employees as well as 
    executors, administrators or beneficiaries of the estates of deceased 
    employees, guardians or members of a committee for incompetent former 
    employees, or similar persons duly authorized by law to administer the 
    estate or assets of former employees. The inclusion of all individuals 
    described in the preceding sentence in the term ``employee'' is only to 
    permit registration on Form S-8 of:
        (i) The exercise of employee benefit plan stock options and the 
    subsequent sale of the securities, if these exercises and sales are 
    permitted under the terms of the plan; and
        (ii) The acquisition of registrant securities pursuant to intra-
    plan transfers among plan funds, if these transfers are permitted under 
    the terms of the plan.
        (4) The term registrant as used in this Form means the company 
    whose securities are to be offered pursuant to the plan, and also may 
    mean the plan itself.
        (5) The form also is available for the exercise of employee benefit 
    plan options and the subsequent resale of the underlying securities by 
    an employee's family member who has acquired the options from the 
    employee through a gift or a domestic relations order. For purposes of 
    this form, ``family member'' includes any child, stepchild, grandchild, 
    parent, stepparent, grandparent, spouse, former spouse, sibling, niece, 
    nephew, mother-in-law, father-in-law, son-in-law, daughter-in-law, 
    brother-in-law, or sister-in-law, including adoptive relationships, any 
    person sharing the employee's household (other than a tenant or 
    employee), a trust in which these persons have more than fifty percent 
    of the beneficial interest, a foundation in which these persons (or the 
    employee) control the management of assets, and any other entity in 
    which these persons (or the employee) own more than fifty percent of 
    the voting interests. Form   S-8 is not available for the exercise of 
    options transferred for value. The following transactions are not 
    prohibited transfers for value:
        (i) A transfer under a domestic relations order in settlement of 
    marital property rights; and
        (ii) A transfer to an entity in which more than fifty percent of 
    the voting interests are owned by family members (or the employee) in 
    exchange for an interest in that entity.
    * * * * *
        Dated: February 25, 1999.
    
        By the Commission.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-5297 Filed 3-5-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-P
    
    
    

Document Information

Published:
03/08/1999
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
99-5297
Pages:
11103-11117 (15 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release No. 33-7646, 34-41109, File No. S7-2-98
RINs:
3235-AG94: Addressing Abuses of Form S-8 by Companies Using Consultants To Raise Capital
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3235-AG94/addressing-abuses-of-form-s-8-by-companies-using-consultants-to-raise-capital
PDF File:
99-5297.pdf
CFR: (6)
17 CFR 228.402
17 CFR 229.402
17 CFR 230.401
17 CFR 230.405
17 CFR 239.13
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