出版物
International arbitration report
In this edition, we focused on the Shanghai International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission’s (SHIAC) new arbitration rules, which take effect January 1, 2024.
United Kingdom | 出版物 | 十二月 2024
On 15 November 2024 the Financial Conduct Authority (FCA) published Primary Market Bulletin 52 (PMB 52) discussing a number of potential issues, and practical steps for issuers to consider, in relation to the identification, handling and dissemination of inside information in accordance with the UK Market Abuse Regulation (UK MAR).
In this briefing we summarise the areas covered in PMB 52 and some of the key takeaways for issuers and their boards.
One key message is that inside information may not always be identified as soon as it arises in the following scenarios:
Practical steps for issuers include: establishing a disclosure committee but also a more nimble, ad hoc process in case of need; training for finance teams and other employees; and ensuring adequate governance processes such as maintaining insider lists and documenting decision-making.
The FCA also makes a number of points around shareholder engagement, including the importance of avoiding selective disclosure of inside information (such as through apps or calls with a subset of shareholders), maintaining records of communications and ensuring that information has been published before treating it as being no longer inside (arising from some incidents relating to the Crowdstrike disruption in July 2024).
The FCA is likely to intervene in the event of untoward share price movements or where it suspects disclosure of inside information on investor calls.
Further information on each of these areas is set out below, together with a section setting out our key takeaways for issuers and their boards.
Following the FCA’s work in relation to potential leaks and live market monitoring, PMB 52 highlights three common scenarios in which the FCA has seen differing approaches taken by issuers (offer processes, preparation of periodic financial information and CEO resignations and appointments). It highlights a number of practical steps that issuers should consider taking in relation to identification of inside information in these scenarios and more generally.
Offer processes
The FCA gives non-exhaustive examples of potential factors that could be taken into account by issuers when assessing whether the receipt of an offer is inside information, such as:
In relation to the last of these, the FCA flags that it is possible that receipt of an offer could amount to inside information before it has been formally considered and recommended by the board. This is because, when assessing whether information is “precise” for the purposes of the inside information analysis and considering whether future circumstances/events can reasonably be expected to come into existence/occur, the test is not whether this is “more likely than not”; instead the test is lower and capable of being met where there is a “more than fanciful chance” of the future event or circumstances occurring.
PMB 52 also discusses the implications of press speculation/rumours during an offer process, stresses the importance of issuers complying with insider lists and other obligations under UK MAR during any period of delayed disclosure, and notes that there may be circumstances where a disclosure requirement is triggered under UK MAR notwithstanding that an announcement is not required under the UK Takeover Code.
Preparation of periodic financial information
PMB 52 refers to the guidance on periodic financial information and inside information in Technical Note 506.2, reminding issuers that assessment must be made on a case-by-case basis (rather than taking a blanket approach that information to be included in periodic financial reports will always or never constitute inside information) and that, where inside information does arise, delayed disclosure will only be permitted in the limited circumstances discussed in the Technical Note.
The FCA highlights that there are situations where information could be inside information at an early stage but where delayed disclosure is not justified, in which case information should be disclosed as soon as possible in a way which allows it to be correctly assessed by the public. By way of example, the FCA has seen cases where finance packs presented to the board weeks before a scheduled earnings announcement have shown revenues did not meet internal/external consensus forecasts. In some cases, a decision has been taken not to disclose the fact that performance is significantly behind forecast on the basis this will be made up for by significant over-performance later in the year. Where this has then not happened, publication of the financial statements has in some cases resulted in share price falls of between 40% and 50% (the FCA has also seen similar effects from the loss of major contracts which it notes is another event which may take time to become certain).
The FCA points to the existing guidance which makes it clear that justifying non-disclosure by offsetting negative and positive news is not acceptable and that issuers should not delay disclosure of the fact they are in financial difficulty or that their financial condition is worsening, although they may be able to delay disclosure of the fact or substance of negotiations to deal with such a situation.
CEO resignations and appointments
While the FCA is conscious issuers are likely to want to manage disclosure of a CEO’s resignation and the appointment of their replacement as smoothly/concurrently as possible, it stresses the importance of timely identification and disclosure of inside information – especially where there is a leak or press speculation during the succession process.
Separate assessments should be carried out in relation to both the resignation and the appointment (given each could on its own be capable of constituting inside information at different points in time) and issuers should carefully and continuously consider on a case-by-case basis whether inside information has arisen. It is possible for inside information to exist at an early stage and before the formal resignation of the existing CEO/appointment of their replacement – the FCA notes, for example, this could include where the CEO has signalled an intention to resign and/or the board has started discussions to appoint a potential successor. In this context, when assessing whether inside information exists, the test of whether the information is precise is most relevant and the FCA reminds issuers that intermediate steps in a protracted process are capable of constituting inside information. Factors that issuers may want to consider when assessing the price sensitivity of the resignation/appointment could include the existing CEO’s length of service (and therefore the market’s expectation in terms of their retirement as CEO), the expectation that a “natural” successor exists or the reasons behind the resignation. Particular care should be taken to control inside information during the recruitment process – especially where an external search consultancy has been appointed.
The FCA references the possibility of delayed disclosure of either a resignation or appointment noting that, where there is a leak, an announcement should be made as soon as possible. Where there is continuous press speculation about the succession, issuers should consider whether this constitutes a leak. The FCA reminds issuers of the guidance on delaying disclosure and dealing with leaks and rumours in Technical Note 520.2 and suggests factors to take into account could include the accuracy of the speculation in relation to both the identity/number of potential successors and the stage to which the identification and appointment process has progressed.
Issuers with a listing in the equity shares (commercial companies) (ESCC) category are also reminded that they must comply with the specific notifications required under UKLR 6 in relation to board changes.
Practical steps issuers can take
The FCA sets out a number of actions issuers could take to make sure they are well prepared to correctly identify when information may constitute inside information. These include:
The FCA recognises regular shareholder engagement is a key principle of good governance and that issuers will interact with their shareholders multiple times during a financial year and will use different channels to do so. It is aware that (alongside communications with the media, analysts, institutional shareholders and other stakeholders) some issuers use communication apps and private calls to interact with investors, in particular groups of smaller private shareholders. While these interactions can provide smaller shareholders with an important opportunity to engage directly with the issuer’s management on performance and strategy, they can also create risks that confidential, non-public or price-sensitive information is shared. The FCA has seen these risk crystallise where calls take place in the absence of the issuer publishing any RIS announcements regarding progress/financial performance outside its periodic financial reporting obligations under DTR 4.
Issuers are reminded that the disclosure of inside information is prohibited under UK MAR unless it is necessary in the normal exercise of an employment, a profession or duties and PMB 52 refers, among other things, to the financial penalty imposed on Sir Christopher Gent in 2022 (see our briefing Key takeaways in relation to the FCA's decision concerning Sir Christopher Gent) in this context. Other points made by the FCA include:
Where the FCA sees untoward share price movements on the back of investor calls taking place, it is likely to make contact in real time to understand what was discussed and whether the issuer may have an announcement obligation. It may also make further enquiries (which could lead to enforcement action) after the event if it suspects inside information may have been disclosed or discussed.
Practical steps issuers can take
The FCA sets out some actions which issuers may want to consider in order to limit the risk of inside information being disclosed or misleading statements being made if they do communicate privately with shareholder groups. These include:
The FCA also notes that, in certain circumstances, an issuer may wish to publish an announcement following the call/meeting to confirm that it took place, set out any information that was shared and confirm that the issuer does not deem the information to be inside information.
PMB 52 notes that the widespread disruption caused by the Crowdstrike update in July 2024 affected some PIPs, resulting in them being unable to disseminate issuer’s announcements for a period of time. The FCA notes, among other things, that during the outage it saw some issuers publishing regulated information on their websites despite it not having been released via a PIP. This has the potential to be inadvertent unlawful disclosure, and issuers should always confirm by observation that the announcement has been successfully disseminated via their PIP before uploading regulated information onto their website or otherwise disclosing/publishing it themselves.
Issuers are also encouraged to consider having alternate PIP accounts in place so that they can meet their disclosure obligations if their usual PIP is affected by an outage. Where their usual PIP has not released the regulated information, issuers should discuss with them when it is likely to be disseminated and whether the PIP has alternate arrangements in place. Subject to those discussions, the issuer should consider whether the information can be disseminated using its own second PIP account.
PMB 52 follows on from a number of previous bulletins relating to inside information, including PMB 42 (Unlawful disclosure: FCA discusses areas of risk for issuers) and PMB 46 (see here) – as such, this is clearly a current area of focus for the FCA. In addition to the specific actions suggested in PMB 52, other areas that issuers should think about include:
Boards may also want to review their internal policies and procedures around handling and disclosure of inside information to ensure that they reflect the commentary in this and other recent FCA publications, including highlighting areas of heightened risk and how these should be approached, and providing refresher training for key individuals.
出版物
In this edition, we focused on the Shanghai International Economic and Trade Arbitration Commission’s (SHIAC) new arbitration rules, which take effect January 1, 2024.
出版物
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