Are foreign issuers shunning the U.S.? Lots of rumors suggest that's happening, and there is some evidence that listings here have suffered in the wake of Sarbanes-Oxley. But the situation is complicated, and more than just rules are involved.There's a theory out there, the kind heard around water coolers and in the halls during investment banking seminars, that the Sarbanes-Oxley Act See SOX. is a bogeyman scaring potential foreign registrants from U.S. exchanges. More specifically, the rumors say, the Act's Section 404, the infamous internal controls section, has become to overseas firms a kind of horror story horror story Story intended to elicit a strong feeling of fear. Such tales are of ancient origin and form a substantial part of folk literature. They may feature supernatural elements such as ghosts, witches, or vampires or address more realistic psychological fears. passed around the proverbial campfire. [ILLUSTRATION OMITTED] The stories aren't new; they've been building over the past three years as U.S. public companies wrestled with the law and the number of foreign companies opting not to list in the U.S. has surged. And, like most stories, there is both truth and misperception mis·per·ceive tr.v. mis·per·ceived, mis·per·ceiv·ing, mis·per·ceives To perceive incorrectly; misunderstand. mis . A closer look shows that the situation is far less black-and-white than it might seem on the surface. Statistically, there's no question that foreign exchanges are doing much more business--but not all of that is being taken from the U.S. And while Sarbanes-Oxley is frequently cited as a reason for steering clear of the U.S., market observers say those fears have been moderating as the law's dimensions have become better known. Moreover, many foreign companies continue to list in the U.S.--listing dollar totals have doubled this year over last--because its capital markets are the deepest, the most liquid and the most transparent in the world. Still, it's impossible to ignore a number of developments with respect to foreign issuers: * The rise of the London Stock Exchange's Alternative Investment Market (AIM), which has become a market of choice for many emerging companies, including many in the U.S. (see "The AIM is Growth," box on this page). It touts its regulatory "flexibility" and lack of formal, documented requirements for its sharp growth in recent years. * The continued distaste in Europe for Sarbanes-Oxley-type regulation. "The European tendency is to let issuers regulate themselves by adopting codes of corporate governance Corporate Governance The relationship between all the stakeholders in a company. This includes the shareholders, directors, and management of a company, as defined by the corporate charter, bylaws, formal policy, and rule of law. , not to impose good practice on them, as Congress and the SEC [Securities and Exchange Commission] do," wrote Prof. Roberta Karmel of Brooklyn Law School History The school was founded in 1901 by William Payson Richardson and Norman Haffey. It opened with 18 students. The school is noted for its diversity. Photographs indicate that by 1909, African Americans and women attended the school. The school was affiliated with St. in an article in the Bowne Digest in October 2004. Similarly, a study by Mazars, the European accounting and professional services (job) professional services - A department of a supplier providing consultancy and programming manpower for the supplier's products. firm, indicated that European companies It may never be fully completed or, depending on its its nature, it may be that it can never be completed. However, new and revised entries in the list are always welcome. This is a list of companies from the countries in the European Union. were more hostile to this type of regulation than those from Asia and Latin America Latin America, the Spanish-speaking, Portuguese-speaking, and French-speaking countries (except Canada) of North America, South America, Central America, and the West Indies. , which saw compliance as a means of winning investors' trust. Episodes like the flight of Porsche AG, the German sports car legend, certainly provide evidence of some European annoyance. In October 2002, Porsche announced it had decided not to go forward with its intended listing on the New York Stock Exchange New York Stock Exchange (NYSE) World's largest marketplace for securities. The exchange began as an informal meeting of 24 men in 1792 on what is now Wall Street in New York City. (NYSE NYSE See: New York Stock Exchange ), due to Sarbanes-Oxley. It subsequently listed on the Frankfurt Stock Exchange Frankfurt Stock Exchange The largest of Germany's eight securities exchanges, operated by Deutsche Borse AS. . * The documented chill coming from Asia. According to according to prep. 1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians. 2. In keeping with: according to instructions. 3. Dealogic, which tracks investment banking transactions, in 2000 the NYSE and Nasdaq had a 25 per cent market share (in value terms) of listings from companies based in Asia, excluding Japan. In the year to date, the comparable number is a paltry 4 per cent. * The fact that all but one of the 25 largest initial public offerings (IPOs) last year listed outside the U.S. Many of those, however, were state-owned enterprises that chose to list on their local exchange, including China, where three of the five largest IPOs in 2005 came out on the Hong Kong Stock Exchange The Hong Kong Stock Exchange (Traditional Chinese: 香港交易所, also 港交所; abbreviated as HKEX; HKSE: 0388 ) is the stock exchange of Hong Kong. . Yet, for all of this, the dropoff in foreign registrants hasn't been exactly momentous. The total fell from 1,344 at yearend 2001 to 1,236 at the close of 2005, a slide of 8 percent (see table on page 28). The Over-the-Counter (OTC OTC See: Over-the-counter. OTC See over-the-counter market (OTC). ) index for small companies still has the most listings, followed closely by the NYSE and then Nasdaq, both for its Stock Market and the Capital Market for small-cap companies. Canadian companies This is a list of companies from Canada.
Directory: A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z Current Companies represented fully 515 of the listings, or 42 percent; the U.K. was a distant second, with 88. "There is something there" in terms of Section 404 being a deterrent to foreign issuers, but the Securities and Exchange Commission "doesn't want to put the brakes on any import of foreign registrants, only to have them go elsewhere," says Jerry Arnold, a professor at the Leventhal School of Accounting at the University of Southern California The U.S. News & World Report ranked USC 27th among all universities in the United States in its 2008 ranking of "America's Best Colleges", also designating it as one of the "most selective universities" for admitting 8,634 of the almost 34,000 who applied for freshman admission . (A related issue, which finds the regulatory burden driving listed companies to "go dark," or de-list from U.S. exchanges, will be covered in an upcoming issue of Financial Executive.) Certainly, U.S. regulators haven't had their heads in the sand on the subject of foreign issuers. The SEC has provided repeated extensions to foreign registrants for compliance with Sarbanes-Oxley Section 404 (see "Cutting Foreign Filers a Few Breaks," on this page), and regulators have spoken out about the issue directly, as well. For instance, Public Company Accounting Oversight Board The Public Company Accounting Oversight Board (or PCAOB) (sometimes called "Peekaboo") is a private-sector, non-profit corporation created by the Sarbanes-Oxley Act, a 2002 United States federal law, to oversee the auditors of public companies. (PCAOB PCAOB Public Company Accounting Oversight Board ) Board Member Charles Niemeier, speaking in August to Brazilian executives and securities officials, said: "Today, some in the United States United States, officially United States of America, republic (2005 est. pop. 295,734,000), 3,539,227 sq mi (9,166,598 sq km), North America. The United States is the world's third largest country in population and the fourth largest country in area. complain that burdensome regulation has discouraged companies from tapping U.S. capital markets. In support of this argument, they point to circumstantial evidence circumstantial evidence In law, evidence that is drawn not from direct observation of a fact at issue but from events or circumstances that surround it. If a witness arrives at a crime scene seconds after hearing a gunshot to find someone standing over a corpse and holding a such as the number of large new IPOs choosing to list on non-U.S. markets as well as the growth in the London Stock Exchange's Alternative Investment Market for smaller companies, but it's not clear to me that this is the case." Niemeier argued that more than compliance costs, the expenses associated with an IPO (Initial Public Offering) The first time a company offers shares of stock to the public. While not a computer term per se, many founders, employees and insiders of computer companies have found this acronym more exciting than any tech term they ever heard. in the U.S. might be the problem. A recent study, he noted, estimated that underwriting fees consume 6.5 to 7 percent of IPO receipts in the U.S., compared to 3 to 4 percent in Europe. Arguments for U.S. Officials at the NYSE and Nasdaq have taken the high road, promoting the value of listing in the U.S. rather than disparaging dis·par·age tr.v. dis·par·aged, dis·par·ag·ing, dis·par·ag·es 1. To speak of in a slighting or disrespectful way; belittle. See Synonyms at decry. 2. To reduce in esteem or rank. standards elsewhere. "For the non-U.S. companies, the U.S. provides unrivaled access to a very deep and broad pool of investors and enables companies to extend their own visibility on a global stage," noted Noreen Culhane Noreen M. Culhane is currently the Executive Vice President, Global Corporate Client Group, for the New York Stock Exchange. She is responsible for the Exchange’s worldwide efforts to attract new listings and to serve companies already listed. Ms. , executive vice president of the Global Corporate Client Group at the NYSE, in a report on IPOs published this year by Ernst & Young. At Nasdaq, Charlotte Cross-well, head of International Listings, has noted that "Sarbanes-Oxley has taken away some of the bigger business from the U.S., due to the complexity of listing for those companies, but people are becoming more familiar with Sarbanes-Oxley, and there is the desire to comply with the highest corporate governance standards in the world." Others outside the exchanges echo those sentiments. "Our financial markets are based on knowing that the financial statements of every company are accurate," says Ronald Mosimann, president of BI International, a consulting and software firm in Malvern, Pa., that specializes in Sarbanes-Oxley compliance. "Companies currently listed or desiring to be listed in the U.S should take pride in that principle. Meeting this high standard separates and makes our financial markets superior from those overseas." "There is no market that understands our business better than the U.S.," said Shaun Wang, CFO See Chief Financial Officer. of Baidu.com, after Baidu did an IPO on Nasdaq in August 2005. The Chinese-language search engine didn't want to list in Hong Kong Hong Kong (hŏng kŏng), Mandarin Xianggang, special administrative region of China, formerly a British crown colony (2005 est. pop. 6,899,000), land area 422 sq mi (1,092 sq km), adjacent to Guangdong prov. , he said, adding, "For a technology offering, the Nasdaq is the place to be." A great deal of the attitude toward the U.S. from foreign firms depends on variables like size, company history and country of origin. Mary Anne Busse, managing director of Great Disclosure LLC (Logical Link Control) See "LANs" under data link protocol. LLC - Logical Link Control , an advisory firm in Royal Oak, Mich., and a former SEC lawyer, has been leading compliance training for larger companies from Europe, Canada and Latin America. "What I hear from a lot of folks that come to our training is that they are basically gearing up for dealing with compliance," she says. "Most of them are very large multinationals, and they're deciding to bite the bullet and comply." Just about all are already reporting in their home counties and experiencing a certain level of regulatory oversight, she says. Busse says that a number of more mature companies have come to see the value of listing in the U.S. and regard Sarbanes-Oxley as a cost of doing business here. But for far smaller and newer companies, the equation may be a lot different. A U.S. listing "may be cost-prohibitive for the smallest issuers," she says. For foreign companies in general, Busse adds, "there has always been a hesitancy hes·i·tan·cy n. An involuntary delay or inability in starting the urinary stream. to come to the U.S. They're asking themselves, 'What rewards will I reap?' And the cost of entry has tripled or quadrupled [under Sarbanes-Oxley]." It Isn't All About Regulation Some foreign companies choose to list outside the U.S. for reasons that have nothing to do with regulation. "Given our industry specialization and [the fact that] our peer group of companies, such as BHP Billiton BHP Billiton is the world's largest mining company.[1] Its origin is in the 2001 merger of Australia's Broken Hill Proprietary Company (BHP) and the UK's Billiton, which has a South African background. The result is a dual-listed company. and Rio Tinto Rio Tinto may refer to:
A newfound liquidity is washing over Asian markets, and exchanges there are perceived as relatively well-regulated. Companies no longer have to suffer long flights to the U.S. to drum up capital, and a number of key U.S. fund managers work in Asia as well. Moreover, far from shying from stricter codes, Japan is preparing to adopt its own version of Sarbanes-Oxley. The so-called "J-Sox" law, drafted earlier this year, would apply language similar to Sections 302 and 404 for Japanese companies This is a list of companies from Japan. Note that 株式会社 can be (and frequently is) read both kabushiki kaisha and kabushiki gaisha (with or without a hyphen). See that article for more details. , effective April 2008; some 3,800 Japanese-listed companies would be subject to the law. What's happening in other burgeoning Asian cities like Singapore and Hong Kong is indicative of a new era. "We are seeing the continued globalization globalization Process by which the experience of everyday life, marked by the diffusion of commodities and ideas, is becoming standardized around the world. Factors that have contributed to globalization include increasingly sophisticated communications and transportation of capital markets, with increasingly more companies, investors and exchanges looking worldwide for growth opportunities," says Gregory Ericksen, global vice chair of Strategic Growth Markets for Ernst & Young. "This is causing a shift in the IPO landscape." Statistically, the U.S. share of IPOs dropped from 36 percent in 2001 to 24 percent last year. But it isn't simply a matter of companies turning from the U.S.; they are embracing their home markets. A record 29 countries hosted IPOs of $1 billion or more last year, a strong signal of the diversification of markets around the globe. Moreover, the fact that the biggest IPOs of 2005 and this year--the $9.2 billion issue for China Construction Bank and the $11.2 billion offering for Bank of China, respectively--went to market in Hong Kong defies the theory that companies over a certain size need to list in the U.S. in order to raise sufficient capital. Still, U.S. regulators aren't changing their rules in response. While willing to cut foreign issuers some slack on deadlines, it seems clear that they haven't been ready to create Sarbanes-Oxley "Lite" or otherwise water down standards to lure foreign registrants. Change may be in the wind, however. The creation of a new commission, The Committee on Capital Markets Regulation, in mid-September does signal concern on Wall Street and in Washington. The body is tasked with recommending changes to regulations, including Sarbanes-Oxley, if they are deemed to be hurting the competitiveness of U.S. capital markets. The committee has high-profile leadership, being co-chaired by former White House economic adviser Glenn Hubbard Glenn Hubbard can refer to:
RELATED ARTICLE: The AIM Is Growth The London Stock Exchange London Stock Exchange London marketplace for securities. It was formed in 1773 by a group of stockbrokers who had been doing business informally in local coffeehouses. (LSE LSE - Language Sensitive Editor ) may still be an also-ran in relation to The New York Stock Exchange and Nasdaq, but its Alternative Investment Market (AIM) for small and growing companies has been getting plenty of action and a lot of buzz as an option to its U.S. rivals. AIM has been around since 1995, but has been catching a growth wave that truly seems to coincide with the arrival of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act in 2002. Since then, the number of participants has more than doubled, and the pace of "admissions," as AIM labels registrants, has increased each year. Small wonder that when U.S. regulatory burdens are brought up, AIM is a name on many lips. "We are still advising companies with less than $300 million in capitalization to go to AIM because of the regulatory advantages," wrote Ernst & Young U.K. partner David Wilkinson David Wilkinson may refer to:
AIM isn't just about small companies, although those have been its lifeblood. Many companies, the exchange says, have transitioned to the Main Market of the London Stock Exchange "following their success and positive experience on AIM." More than 2,400 companies have signed on to the market since its formation, raising more than 30 billion pounds in the process, the LSE says. AIM's appeal has been especially strong in English-speaking nations like the U.K., Australia and the U.S., observers say, but it extends to markets like the Far East, Eastern Europe Eastern Europe The countries of eastern Europe, especially those that were allied with the USSR in the Warsaw Pact, which was established in 1955 and dissolved in 1991. and the Middle East. John Porter, a managing director with Morgan Stanley, says that the flexibility that AIM offers is its key appeal. While he senses some concern among venture capital firms Name Location Founding date Managing Partners/Directors Specialty Capital managed 5AM Ventures Menlo Park, CA; Waltham, MA 2002 John Diekman, PhD (managing partner), Scott Rocklage, PhD (managing partner), Andrew Schwab (managing partner) life sciences $200M [1] about whether AIM is truly a credible exchange, he thinks that perception is changing. To join AIM, companies don't need a minimum size, number of shareholders or financial track record--listing requirements that are clearly more liberal than those on the main U.S. exchanges. Rather than listing standards, AIM has a "rulebook" that is constantly being updated, the LSE says, to ensure that the rules "are pragmatic and practicable" for smaller companies. A critical notion behind AIM is that of "Nomads," which stands for Nominated Advisors. "Nomads act as the principal quality control mechanism for AIM, and they carry out checks on companies before agreeing to sign a declaration that the particular company is appropriate and ready to come to AIM," the LSE notes on its website. The Nomads, in turn, are overseen by a team of market specialists at the LSE; these include attorneys, chartered accounts and corporate finance professionals. Not surprisingly, success breeds competition. France has created a second-tier market, Alternext, as has Germany, the Entry Standard, which saw 15 companies list in its first month of existence after it began Oct. 25, 2005. Roland Mosimann, President of BI International, a consulting and software firm in Malvern, Pa., that specializes in Sarbanes-Oxley compliance, thinks that the spate of interest in exchanges like AIM will dissipate over time. "We've been working with a few venture capital firms, and they've been lamenting the fact that people have been going to the AIM in London to list," he says. "There's a short-term truth to that [notion], and there is some short-term arbitrage going on. But once [Sarbanes-Oxley] is stabilized, we believe there will be a perceived premium to being in the U.S." --Jeffrey Marshall RELATED ARTICLE: Cutting Foreign Filers a Few Breaks You can't say the SEC is holding foreign filers' feet to the fire over compliance issues. The agency has issued a series of extensions aimed at cutting foreign registrants a break on Sarbanes-Oxley compliance with Section 404, the critical section on internal controls. On August 9, for instance, the SEC took three actions to provide relief on 404 deadlines, each of which affects foreign filers. A final rule extends the effective date for "accelerated" foreign filers to provide their 404-b attestations on internal control to the fiscal year ending July 15, 2007. A proposed rule would extend the effective date for "non-accelerated" filers, including U.S. and foreign companies, to the fiscal year ending Dec. 15, 2007 for the 404-a management report on internal controls, and a year later for the 404-b auditors' attestation. First-time foreign filers, including initial public offerings (IPOs), also received a proposed extension. They wouldn't be required to provide either a management assessment or auditor attestation report on internal control in their first annual report with the SEC, but would be required to do so if they had already filed at least one annual report. However, "large accelerated" foreign filers--generally deemed to have more than $700 million in market capitalization--have run out of extensions. After getting one in both 2004 and 2005, these registrants were given a firm effective date of fiscal year ending this past July 15 to produce 404 reports for the SEC in their next annual report. "It is very encouraging that the SEC is listening to foreign registrants, who feel that they do not have the time to adequately assess the design of internal controls and to put in place cost-effective, long-term remediation strategies," Shaun Critten, senior partner at London advisory firm willismorris, said in a published interview with Ernst & Young. "Some companies have been looking at band-aid solutions to get them across the implementation line, yet these solutions may not be sustainable in the long term." RELATED ARTICLE: takeaways * Rumors abound that Sarbanes-Oxley, and its Section 404 in particular, have driven foreign companies from listing in the U.S. While there is some statistical support for that idea, the situation isn't that simple. * U.S. regulators have extended the deadlines for foreign firms to comply with Section 404, but are holding fast against dilution any of its provisions. * Globalization of capital markets and the growth of local exchanges are the major reasons for the migration away from U.S. listings. Companies believe they don't have to come to the U.S., and some are listing locally to bolster their home-country exchanges. Foreign Registrants: A Slide, Not a Stampede Year Total 2001 1,344 2002 1,319 2003 1,232 2004 1,240 2005 1,236 Source: SEC Data |
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