
From where I sit, the SEC under the chairmanship of Jay Clayton has generally done a good job for public companies. It has adopted a number of rules and amendments that make disclosure more effective without appreciably adding to – and in some cases reducing – the burdens on public companies. Examples include streamlining financial disclosure requirements, rationalizing the definitions of “smaller reporting company”, “accelerated filer”, and “large accelerated filer”, and revising the rules governing financial statements of acquired and disposed businesses (although the latter do not take effect until 2021). And let’s not forget the very recent rule changes affecting proxy advisory firms, including a critical requirement that those firms provide companies with their voting recommendations.
While I wish that the SEC had also focused on proxy plumbing, it’s still a pretty good record, and it’s only a partial listing.
However (you knew there would be a “however”), I’m profoundly disappointed in the SEC’s proposal to “fix” Form 13F – the form on which large investment managers report their equity holdings of public companies. While it’s nice that the SEC has turned its attention to a form that has long been in need of updating, the proposal seems to me to be unacceptable in at least two major respects.
Continue Reading 13F proposal — the SEC can (and should) do better








The SEC is re-examining one of the most important disclosures companies provide – Management’s Discussion and Analysis, or MD&A. I’ve read lots of MD&As in my time, and to be completely candid, many of them – or at least too many of them – are poor.