Publication
Essential Corporate News – Week ending 8 November 2024
On 6 November 2024, the Home Office published guidance under section 204 Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 (ECCTA).
Global | Publication | December 22, 2017
Welcome to Essential Corporate News, our weekly news service covering the latest developments in the UK corporate world.
On December 15, 2017 the FRC published its revised guidance, in the form of a Bulletin, for auditors when agreeing to the publication of preliminary announcements. The aim of the Bulletin is to provide investors with greater transparency about the status of the information included within preliminary announcements.
The Bulletin notes that while Listing Rule 9.7A.1R(2) requires listed companies to agree the preliminary announcement with their auditor prior to its publication, the Listing Rules do not indicate what form the agreement with the auditor should take, or the extent of work expected of the auditor before the auditor gives its agreement. As a result, the Bulletin provides guidance on the procedures that would normally be carried out by the auditor and on communicating the outcome of such procedures to the directors.
The Bulletin reflects feedback received from stakeholders and follows a consultation conducted earlier in the year. It also reflects:
changes in the UK Listing Rules since 2008;
changes to International Standards on Auditing (ISAs) (UK);
new guidance from the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) about alternative performance measures; and
changes to the UK Corporate Governance Code and the principle that the board should present a fair, balanced and understandable assessment of the company’s position and prospects.
The Bulletin includes current guidance on the use of alternative performance measures, guidance on a new voluntary report, prepared by the auditor, which sets out the status of the financial statement audit and the procedures carried out by the auditor to agree to publication of any preliminary announcement, as well as illustrative example terms of engagement and an illustrative auditor’s report.
On December 18, 2017 the FRC’s Audit and Assurance (A&A) Lab published its first project report on audit committee reporting. The project is being covered in two phases and this report completes Phase 1 which explored how investors’ confidence in an audit is enhanced by external reporting by audit committees in the annual report. Phase 2 will look at auditors’ reports to audit committees (which will be reported on during the first half of 2018).
The project focuses on those aspects of audit committee reporting that participants in the project say it would be most helpful to improve and the report includes “best practice” examples of reporting. It also covers questions to assist audit committee chairs and investors, the role of audit committees, appointment and tendering, independence and objectivity and effectiveness in the context of the external auditor, reporting on significant issues, internal control, risk management systems and internal audit.
The report notes that investors would welcome more specific reporting on:
On December 19, 2017 the Investment Association launched its Public Register of listed companies which have had significant shareholder rebellions during their AGMs. The Public Register aims to increase transparency, accountability and scrutiny of listed companies by shareholders, media and the wider public.
The Public Register incorporates all FTSE All-Share companies that received 20 per cent or more votes against any resolution during their AGM in 2017. It also includes those companies that withdrew a resolution prior to their AGM. It is hoped that the Public Register will encourage these companies to respond to the concerns of their investors as it will highlight their public statements. So far, almost one third (31 per cent) of companies named on the Public Register have provided a public response explaining how they are addressing their shareholders’ concerns.
On December 19, 2017 the Institute of Chartered Secretaries and Administrators (ICSA) Governance Institute and Board Intelligence published a summary of their research into how board reporting (the preparation of reports and other papers discussed at board meetings) operates in organisations. They surveyed 80 governance professionals representing organisations of all sizes and sectors with the aim of identifying the main challenges to effective board reporting so that organisations can be helped to address these challenges.
The main findings from the research are as follows:
Next steps
Board Intelligence and ICSA intend to produce three tools to help organisations with the preparation and presentation of their board reporting:
On December 14, 2017 the Law Commission published its 13th Programme of Law Reform which includes a project looking at the use of electronic signatures.
The Law Commission notes that there is no case law or legislation setting out explicitly that documents executed with an electronic signature satisfy statutory requirements for certain documents to be “in writing” or signed under hand, and states that this is preventing businesses moving to fully electronic systems. As a result, the Law Commission is looking to clarify the uncertainty surrounding electronic signatures so that businesses can use such systems with confidence and potentially save consumers time and money.
On December 15, 2017 the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published a consultation paper which seeks views on its proposed draft Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) under the new Prospectus Regulation (Regulation 2017/1129) which came into force on July 20, 2017. These need to be submitted to the European Commission by July 21, 2018.
The draft RTSs relate to the following topics:
Next steps
The consultation closes on March 9, 2018 and the response form can be found here.
(ESMA, Draft Regulatory Technical Standards under the new Prospectus Regulation, 15.12.17)
On December 18, 2017 the European Securities and Markets Authority (ESMA) published its final report on its draft Regulatory Technical Standards (RTS) on the European Single Electronic Format (ESEF). From January 1, 2020 ESEF will be used by all listed issuers to prepare their annual financial reports.
Background
In 2013 the Transparency Directive was amended to include, amongst others, a requirement for issuers to prepare their annual financial reports in a single electronic reporting format. ESMA was assigned the responsibility of developing RTS to specify this electronic reporting format. The aims of the ESEF are to make reporting easier for issuers and to facilitate accessibility, analysis and comparability of annual financial reports.
RTS on ESEF
ESMA has published the following:
All relevant annual financial reports are to be prepared in XHMTL. This format can be opened with standard web browsers and can be prepared and displayed depending on the preferences of an individual issuer. Where an annual financial report contains IFRS consolidated financial statements, these are to be labelled with XBRL tags, making the labelled disclosures structured and machine-readable. This facilitates software-supported analysis and comparison of different reports. As XBRL taxonomies can contain labels in several languages, users will be able to compare numerical information in financial statements across issuers even though the issuers prepare their financial statements in different languages.
ESMA notes that, once implemented, ESEF could serve as a potential reference point for further EU wide initiatives to make company data more comparable, transparent and digitally accessible.
Next steps
ESMA has since submitted its final report to the European Commission, which has three months to decide whether to endorse the RTS.
(ESMA, RTS on the European Single Electronic Format final report, 18.12.17)
On December 18, 2017 the European Commission (the Commission) published a consultation document on building a proportionate regulatory environment to support small and medium-sized enterprise (SME) listings.
The Capital Markets Union (CMU) has aimed to facilitate access to finance for SMEs since the publication of its Action Plan in 2015. The CMU’s mid-term review, published in June 2017, raised the Commission’s level of ambition and strengthened its focus on capital-raising by SMEs on public markets. The Commission has set in motion a number of legislative and non-legislative actions aimed at reviving the public markets for high growth SMEs.
The consultation document is split into two sections:
Next steps
The Commission invites interested parties to provide feedback to the consultation by February 26, 2018.
(European Commission, Consultation on SME listings, 18.12.17)
Publication
On 6 November 2024, the Home Office published guidance under section 204 Economic Crime and Corporate Transparency Act 2023 (ECCTA).
Publication
On 6 November 2024, the UK Takeover Panel (Panel) published response statement RS 2024/1 - Companies to which the Takeover Code applies (Response Statement) setting out final rule changes that will result in a refocusing and significant narrowing of the types of companies subject to the UK Takeover Code (Code). This follows on from the Panel’s previous consultation on this topic in April 2024.
Publication
On 01 August 2024, the European Commission (EC) launched a public consultation on the draft text of the Guidelines on the application of Article 102 TFEU to abusive exclusionary conduct by dominant undertakings (the draft Guidelines).
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