Publication
A decade of diversity disclosure in Canada
The Canadian securities regulators have published their tenth and likely final report on the status of women on boards and in executive officer positions in TSX-listed companies.
Author:
Global | Publication | April 2017
The TSX has published amendments to the TSX Company Manual which, if enacted, would:
require an issuer to maintain a public website and post prescribed documents to the site; and
amend the disclosure requirements for security-based compensation arrangements (the 2017 Proposals).
The 2017 Proposals follow an earlier public consultation by the TSX commenced in May 2016 on the same topics (the 2016 Proposals). The 2017 Proposals modify the earlier proposals as a result of public comments received by the TSX.
Publicly accessible website. Each TSX-listed issuer will be required to maintain a publicly accessible website as was initially proposed in 2016. What has changed is that the 2017 Proposals have narrowed the documents required to be posted on an issuer’s website. Issuers will only be required to post the following documents:
articles of incorporation, amalgamation, continuation or any other constating or establishing documents of the issuer and its by-laws; and
if adopted, copies of the issuer’s
advance notice policy,
position descriptions for the chairman of the board, the lead director, and key officers,
board mandate, and
board committee charters.
Security-based compensation arrangements. Issuers will be required to make enhanced disclosure regarding their security-based compensation arrangements. The 2017 Proposals:
require disclosure of an annual burn rate for each security-based compensation arrangement. This was provided for in the 2016 Proposals. However, the calculation of the burn rate has been modified as a result of comments received. The burn rate will be the percentage calculated by dividing (i) the number of awards granted in the applicable fiscal year by (ii) the weighted average number of outstanding securities of the issuer at the beginning of the applicable fiscal year. The weighted average is the number of outstanding securities adjusted by securities bought back or issued under the arrangement during the period multiplied by a time-weighting factor. For meetings where shareholder approval is sought, issuers will need to disclose the annual burn rate for each of the listed issuer’s three most recently completed fiscal years, unless the plan has not existed for at least three fiscal years, in which case listed issuers will disclose the annual burn rate for each year completed since its adoption or the most recent security holder approval. For annual meetings where security holder approval is not sought, disclosure of the one-year burn rate will be sufficient;
no longer require disclosure to be made in Form 15, which was included in the 2016 Proposals and was intended to provide simplified user-friendly disclosure on security-based compensation arrangements; and
clarify that disclosure prepared for any annual meeting (whether or not shareholder approval is sought) must be prepared as at the last day of the issuer’s fiscal year.
Comments on the 2017 Proposals will be accepted until May 7, 2017. A copy of the 2017 Proposals can be accessed here. Our legal update on the 2016 Proposals is available here.
Publication
The Canadian securities regulators have published their tenth and likely final report on the status of women on boards and in executive officer positions in TSX-listed companies.
Publication
A recent Ontario decision reminds us that (1) it is possible to draft an enforceable termination clause, and (2) responding to a wrongful dismissal claim does not have to be a lengthy, costly endeavour – some claims can be resolved quickly using procedural tools.
Publication
An arbitrator held that Starbucks must maintain its status quo “Borrowing” staffing model at a recently unionized Ontario location, ruling out the “Exclusivity” model it sought for its first collective agreement with the union.
Subscribe and stay up to date with the latest legal news, information and events . . .
© Norton Rose Fulbright LLP 2023