Tagged: Foreign Private Issuer

SEC Provides Clarification of Foreign Private Issuer Calculation

For Canadian issuers and their advisers, compliance with U.S. securities laws generally begins with the question: Is the issuer a “foreign private issuer”? The FPI definition, which is set out in Rule 405 under the Securities Act and 3b-4(c) of the Exchange Act, involves the following four inquiries: Are more than 50% of the issuer’s outstanding voting securities held of record, directly or indirectly, by residents of the United States? Are a majority of the issuer’s executive officers and directors citizens or residents of the United States? Are a majority of the issuer’s assets in the United States? Is the issuer’s business principally administered from within the United States? While the FPI test...

The Importance of Monitoring Your Foreign Private Issuer Status

Being a “foreign private issuer” is very important to a Canadian company’s treatment under U.S. securities laws.  If a Canadian company ceases to qualify as a foreign private issuer under the rules of the U.S. Securities Exchange Commission (SEC), it must generally: Change the way in which it offers and sells its own securities to persons in Canada and other non-U.S. jurisdictions, including the imposition of U.S. legends regardless of the jurisdiction of the purchaser, Begin reporting with the SEC unless its securities are held by a sufficiently small number of persons, and Report with the SEC on U.S. domestic forms rather than the more liberal forms that apply to most Canadian companies...