SEC Adopts Amendments to Enhance Private Fund Reporting
By Alan J. Wilson, WilmerHale
On May 3, 2023, the SEC adopted amendments to Form PF. In an effort designed to enhance the ability of the Financial Stability Oversight Council (FSOC) to assess systemic risk and bolster the SEC’s oversight of private fund advisors, the amendments will require large hedge fund advisers and all private equity fund advisers to file current reports upon the occurrence of certain reporting events that could indicate significant stress at a fund or a potential for investor harm.
Large hedge fund advisers (i.e., those with at least $1.5 billion in hedge fund assets under management) and all private equity fund advisers will be required to file current reports upon the occurrence of certain events that could indicate significant stress at a fund or investor harm. For large hedge fund advisers, reporting within seventy-two hours of the occurrence of any of the following events is required: extraordinary investment losses, significant margin and default events, terminations or material restrictions of prime broker relationships, operations events, and events associated with withdrawals and redemptions. Private equity fund advisers must file reports on the following events within sixty days of each fiscal quarter end: removal of a general partner, certain fund termination events, and the occurrence of an adviser-led secondary transaction.
The amendments concerning current reporting will become effective six months after publication of the adopting release in the Federal Register, with the balance of the amendments becoming effective one year after publication in the Federal Register.
SEC Adds Three New Rule 10b5-1 C&DIs
By Alan J. Wilson, WilmerHale
On May 25, 2023, the SEC Division of Corporation Finance posted three new Exchange Act Rule Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations concerning Rule 10b5-1 (see C&DIs 120.26-.28). The new C&DIs provide guidance in regards to:
- When companies are required to begin providing the quarterly Item 408(a) disclosures and the annual Item 402(x) and Item 408(b) disclosures (Item 16J of Form 20-F disclosures for foreign private issuers) in periodic reports;
- when companies are required to begin providing the disclosures in proxy or information statements; an
- when, in the context of two permissible overlapping plans, trading can begin under the later-commencing plan if the individual terminates an earlier commencing plan.
For more information on the recent amendments to Rule 10b5-1, see our prior post.
PCAOB Expands Audit Firm Inspection Reports, Updates Standard-Setting Agenda
By Thomas W. White, Retired Partner, WilmerHale
Consistent with objectives set forth in its current strategic plan (see our prior note), in May the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board announced initiatives in two areas:
- Inspections—The Board announced that it will include additional information in its reports on its inspections of accounting firms registered with the Board. Most notably, these reports will now include a section discussing auditor independence violations identified in inspection reports. These include instances of noncompliance with PCAOB independence rules, as well as “potential noncompliance” with the Securities and Exchange Commission’s independence rules. The reports will also contain more information related to a firm’s fraud procedures and the identification and assessment of the risks of material misstatements in financial statements; more commentary for certain situations; and new graphs. According to Board Chair Erica Y. Williams, “These enhancements will provide relevant information that investors have asked for and support improvements in overall audit quality.”
- Standard-Setting and Rulemaking—Continuing to advance what Chair Williams calls “one of the most ambitious standard-setting agendas in its history,” the Board staff released a revised agenda that identified two more projects that it anticipates Board action on in the next twelve months. The revised agenda now projects the following standard-setting activities:
- Adoption of pending proposed standards: Proposed quality control and confirmation standards (2023); and proposed standard regarding general responsibilities of auditors (TBD pending analysis of comment letters)
- Standard-setting proposals in 2023: Noncompliance with laws and regulations; going concern; interim attestation standards; audit procedures using technology-assisted data analysis; firm and engagement performance metrics; substantive analytical procedures
- Other standard-setting projects (no target date): Fraud; interim ethics and independence standards; use of a service organization; interim financial information reviews; remaining “interim” standards
The Board also announced four rulemaking projects. These relate to contributory liability for others’ violations; firm reporting and transparency; firm registration; and follow-on disciplinary proceedings. The Board projects proposals on each project in 2023.