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1615 H Street NW - Washington, DC - 20062
I.
Legislative Proposals
review, the SEC stated that it would voluntarily adopt this process to improve upon
the way that reviews of existing regulations are conducted.
Unfortunately, such a retrospective review has not been meaningful, rigorous
or conducted in a positive manner.
The major issues in the JOBS Act and many that have been raised in the
context of a JOBS Act 2.0 were within the competence of the SEC to update
independently. In other words, had a regulatory review process, such as envisioned
by the draft bill or the Presidents executive order, been in place, Congress and the
Administration would not have had to step in. Unfortunately, legislation is needed to
build out a meaningful retrospective review process that can identify obsolete
regulations that may in fact be harmful to an efficient capital market. Through this
legislative proposal, regulations that fail to meet the public interest can be amended,
modernized or if need be taken off the books.
Unfortunately, without legislation, the 2011 retrospective review went nowhere,
while the current efforts on Disclosure Effectivenessupdating corporate disclosures
to provide investors with meaningful decision useful informationis threatened by
bureaucratic inertia.
The periodic structure of the draft bill and reports to Congress are critical to
keeping the SECs feet to the fire. However, we believe that four changes to the bill
can make it even more effective.
First, mandate that the retrospective review first prioritize those rules that are
economically significant under the Small Business Regulatory Enforcement Fairness
Act. This would allow the SEC to focus on regulations that cost the economy more
than $100 million.
Second, mandate that the retrospective review next prioritize those rules that
have numerical thresholds that have not been adjusted in over 20 years. This would
allow the SEC to focus on issues, such as the Rule 701 thresholds, where limits need
to be changed to reflect inflation and fluctuations in the markets. Or if adjustments
are not needed, explain why they should not be made.
Third, mandate that the retrospective review allow for public and notice
comment as required under the Administrative Procedures Act. This would allow for
all stakeholders to provide the SEC with meaningful comment that can help achieve
the goals of the draft bill.
5
Form S-3 and allow smaller issuers to take advantage of the simplified registration
statement.
This has been included in the past recommendations of the SECs own
Government-Business Forum on Small Business Capital Formation, held annually at
SEC headquarters. Like many other recommendations produced every year at the
forum, the SEC has failed to act to modernize registration statements, so Congress
has an important role to play to modernize rules, help business gain access to public
capital markets and accelerate public company formation.
II.
Conclusion
The Chamber views these draft bills, along with our proposed improvements,
as critical steps to try new and innovative ideas and give our regulatory system the
ability to adopt and fulfill its mission in changing times. Therefore, the items under
consideration not only address specific issues that can be corrected, it also allows for
experimentation and sustained efforts to modernize regulations.
Taken together these draft bills and the other legislative proposals from the
April 29, 2015 hearing would provide a basis to allow entrepreneurs to create new
businesses, give investors more information and new ways to invest, and regulators
the means to have better oversight of the capital markets. This is a public policy
trifecta needed to give businesses the ability to grow and stay competitive while
creating new jobs.
I am happy to take any questions that you may have at this time.