SEC Hits Rights Abusers in the Wallet
Casey Institute of the Center for Security Policy
Saturday, May 12, 2001
WASHINGTON - In a truly remarkable 48-hour period, the
process
by which foreign registrants access the vast, globally dominant U.S. debt
and
equity markets has been transformed: Henceforth, national security, human
rights
and religious freedom will be viewed by the Securities and Exchange
Commission
(SEC) as potentially material risks to U.S. and other investors, thereby
requiring
new echelons of disclosure and transparency.
These changes are chronicled in a front-page article by Ted Alden in
Friday's
Financial Times titled "SEC Seeks Closer Watch on Overseas Groups" and
additional
reporting inside the paper. Reduced to its essence, the Times concludes,
"The
move [to evaluate these new categories of 'political risk'] ... marks an
unprecedented
mixing of capital markets regulation with U.S. foreign policy concerns."
Much of the impetus for this breakthrough in nonfinancial risk assessment
in
the markets was catalyzed by one of our nation's most inspired and
tenacious
advocate of human rights, religious freedom and a quick end to the
genocidal
catastrophe in Sudan, Rep. Frank Wolf, R-Va. Wolf
was
among the first lawmakers to recognize the substantial policy leverage
offered
by selective action on the U.S. capital markets. In so doing, he relied
heavily
on the prodigious five-year effort of the William J. Casey Institute - and
its
chairman, Roger Robinson, and Senior Analyst Adam Pener - to strengthen
SEC
disclosure and transparency requirements with respect to known or
prospective
global "bad actors" seeking to raise funds in our debt and equity markets.
Regrettably, these prudent, market-oriented initiatives were staunchly
resisted
by former SEC chairman Arthur Levitt for more than three years. His
departure,
however, allowed the commission's staff and interim leadership to take a
more
rigorous - and conscientious - approach to the oversight of potentially
problematic
foreign offerings.
Just how problematic such offerings might be was recently presented by the
Casey
Institute to board members of leading American pension funds. As noted in
this
memorandum: "We believe the public pension funds have a fiduciary
responsibility
to determine whether a company's - or a country's - domestic or overseas
activities
will negatively affect the value of the fund's investments. Indeed, there
is
abundant evidence to assert that national security and human rights
concerns
have emerged as new risk factors in the markets."
In its correspondence, the Casey Institute recommended that "Pension funds
can
and should include [national security, human rights and religious
freedom]
considerations in their risk assessment of overseas companies." Happily,
this
view has now been adopted by the Securities and Exchange Commission, which
has
explicitly called for such new risk elements to be incorporated into the
due
diligence processes of fund managers. As Alden noted, "the decision
will
also put new pressure on mutual funds and pension funds to expand their
assessments
of the political risks of investing in certain companies."
The Casey Institute applauds Acting SEC Chairman Laura Unger and David
Martin,
director of corporation finance, for their vision and leadership in
addressing
these new areas of potential market peril for largely unwitting American
and
other investors. It is to be hoped that Harvey L. Pitt, President Bush's
newly
announced choice for the SEC chairmanship, will strongly support the
detailed
adjustments recommended by the SEC staff to assure needed transparency and
discipline
with respect to foreign offerings on the U.S. debt and equity markets, as
outlined
in Unger's letter to Rep. Wolf of May 8. Pitt's views on
this
emerging issue area - and especially their consistency with the Unger
standards
- should feature prominently in his upcoming confirmation hearings.
SEC Seeks Closer Watch on Overseas Groups
By Edward Alden
The Financial Times, May 11, 2001
The US Securities and Exchange Commission is planning to demand sharply
increased
disclosure from overseas companies listed in the US that are doing
business with
countries under U.S. embargo.
The move, which comes as the Bush administration on Thursday announced
plans
to nominate Harvey L. Pitt as SEC chairman, marks an unprecedented mixing
of
capital markets regulation with US foreign policy concerns.
It is spelt out in a May 8 letter from Laura Unger, acting SEC chairman,
to Frank
Wolf, the Republican who chairs the House of Representatives
appropriations sub-committee
responsible for the SEC.
In the letter, obtained by the Financial Times, Ms Unger says the SEC will
now
require overseas companies to disclose if they are doing business in any
country
where US companies would be prohibited from investing. These include Iran,
Iraq,
Libya, Sudan, North Korea, Burma and Cuba. The embargo also embraces some
companies
targeted for weapons proliferation.
Ms Unger wrote: "Our aim is to make available to investors additional
information
about situations in which the material proceeds of an offering could -
however
indirectly - benefit countries, governments, or entities that, as a matter
of
US foreign policy, are off-limits to US companies."
The commitments are spelt out as initiatives to be carried out by the SEC
staff,
and are accompanied by a detailed staff memorandum. Except for a small
change
requiring electronic filing by overseas companies, the move does not
demand a
formal rule but can be implemented under existing SEC authority.
The SEC action responds to a growing campaign by human rights groups aimed
at
restricting the ability of companies doing business in war-racked Sudan to
raise
money on US markets.
Mr Wolf demanded last month that the SEC suspend trading in the stock of
PetroChina
and Talisman Energy, the Chinese and Canadian oil companies. PetroChina's
parent
company is the largest investor in a consortium extracting oil in Sudan.
Talisman
holds a smaller share.
Mr Wolf claimed both companies had failed to disclose to investors the
risks
of their involvement in Sudan.
Ms Unger said the SEC had no authority to deny US listings because of a
company's
involvement with any particular foreign country, but would require fuller
disclosure
of these investments.
The SEC, which normally does only selective reviews of disclosure filings,
said
it would attempt to review all registration statements filed by overseas
companies
with business in embargoed countries.
The SEC would work closely on the issue with the Office of Foreign Assets
Control,
the Treasury agency that administers US economic sanctions. The SEC "fully
supports
duly imposed economic sanctions and will co-operate with appropriate US
governmental
agencies to help ensure that those sanctions are enforced", the letter
said.
SEC Chief Inherits Disclosure Bombshell:
Capital Markets Watchdog's Expanded
Role May Cause Sea Change in the Way Foreign Companies List in US
By Edward Alden
The Financial Times, May 11, 2001
Laura Unger, the acting chairman of the US Securities and Exchange
Commission,
has handed a bombshell to her successor Harvey L. Pitt.
Mr Pitt, who was nominated yesterday by President George W. Bush to head
the
SEC, will be given the task of implementing a decision that significantly
expands
the SEC's role in ensuring that foreign companies listing in the US do not
run
foul of US sanctions policy.
The decision was conveyed in a letter this week from Ms Unger to Rep.
Frank Wolf,
who chairs the House appropriations subcommittee with authority over the
SEC
and is co-chair of the House human rights caucus. The SEC, under its
existing
authority to require full disclosure, has declared that investments in
countries
under US sanctions are a significant material risk to investors.
While the US government has never been shy about using sanctions as a
foreign
policy tool, there has been great reluctance, particularly from the US
Treasury,
to link these measures in any way to the US capital markets. The fear is
that
companies could choose to list elsewhere if they believe US markets are
tainted
by political considerations.
The SEC's move "could represent a sea change in the way in which foreign
registrants
access the US capital markets," said Roger W Robinson Jr, chairman of the
William
J Casey Institute, a Washington policy group with close ties to
conservative
groups and human rights activists.
"National security, human rights and religious freedom concerns are now
regarded
as potential material risks to investors," said Mr Robinson, who was a
senior
National Security Council official in the Reagan administration.
While companies are already required in general terms to disclose
political risks,
the new requirements are much more targeted. US-listed companies must now
spell
out their dealings in places such as Iran, Iraq, Libya, Sudan, Burma and
Cuba,
and the SEC has promised aggressive oversight to ensure that US investors
are
fully aware of the risks they are taking in buying stocks or bonds in such
companies.
In a memorandum from David Martin, the director of corporate finance, the
SEC
says that such risks are not limited to the possibility that US sanctions
could
directly hurt the company. In addition, "if it is reasonably likely that
public
opposition to the company would have a materially adverse effect on the
operations
of the company, this risk would also need to be disclosed."
The decision is a big victory for human rights groups that have been
trying to
influence share prices by urging investors to avoid companies doing
business
in countries that violate human rights or religious freedoms. In effect,
the
SEC has said that the campaigns are hurting the stock prices of
controversial
companies.
The US focus has been on Sudan, where a civil war has claimed more than 2m
lives.
Mr Wolf has urged that PetroChina and Talisman Energy, two of the groups
involved
in developing the Sudanese oil fields, be barred from trading in the US.
The campaign scored its biggest success last year when it put pressure on
public
pension funds and other investors to boycott a New York share offering by
PetroChina.
The offering eventually yielded $2.9bn, a fraction of the $10bn the
company had
been seeking.
Sudan activists, with the Casey Institute doing the research legwork, have
also
been calling for broader restrictions on the ability of these companies to
raise
funds in the US.
However, Ms Unger said in the letter that she had no authority to take
such a
drastic step. But she said "we take very seriously" the charge made by Mr
Wolf
that the two companies "may have failed to disclose material information"
with
respect to their operations in Sudan. She would not say whether the two
companies
are under investigation, but said the matter had been referred to the
SEC's enforcement
division.
While the pressure has been focused on Sudan, Ms Unger's decision will
have much
broader ramifications. Many foreign companies listing in the US,
particularly
energy companies, have operations in countries under US embargo and will
be affected
by the new requirements. The disclosure requirement affects any company or
entity
that is covered by sanctions administered by the Treasury's Office of
Foreign
Assets Control.
Michael Mann, former director of international affairs for the SEC, said
that
while the decision pushes disclosure requirements into new areas, it
appears
broadly consistent with past practices. The SEC, he said, has often
updated its
assessment of what constitutes material risk for investors, beginning with
new
environmental criteria following the Love Canal toxic dump scandal of the
late
1970s.
The decision will also put new pressure on mutual funds and pension funds
to
expand their assessments of the political risks of investing in certain
companies.
The center's publications are intended to invigorate and enrich the
debate
on foreign policy and defense issues. The views expressed do not
necessarily
reflect those of all members of the center's board of advisers.
The above publication of the Center for Security Policy can be found,
fully formatted
and hyperlinked to related documents, on the World Wide Web at the
following
address: http://www.security-policy.org/papers/2001/01-F36.html.
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