Title: Identificating Beneficial Ownership Disclosure and enforcement
1Identificating Beneficial OwnershipDisclosure
and enforcement
Moscow, Russian Corporate Governance Roundtable,
3 October 2003
Paulo Câmara, Director CMVM
2Diversification of proprietary structures in
companies
- Control over a company does not involve
necessarily direct acquisition of shares. - Corporate proprietary landscape has changed
dramatically over the recent years due to - trust arrangements
- shareholders agreements
- complex structure of some groups of companies or
other forms of legal persons (inter alia
foundations and partnerships) -
- All these schemes are commonly used in Russia.
3A need for further transparency
- This situation has claimed for increased
transparency over ownership structure of
companies. - This is a universal question - and has been
significantly pointed out as one of the Russian
corporate governance weaknesses. - White Paper (2002) it is essential that
ownership and control structure remains fully
transparent to all shareholders under all
circumstances. -
4Why transparency of ownership structures matters
- Ownership structure affects management of
companies - and therefore affects pricing of
securities. - Hence, transparency is this respect
- Increases investors confidence
- Promotes market efficiency
- Helps market integration
Such is the justification for the first EC
intervention in this field (1988).
5Why transparency of ownership structures matters
- Prophylactic effect
- Disclosure of ownership structure helps to detect
and prevent - illicit use of corporate vehicles (e.g. tax
evasion, money laundering, financing terrorism,
infringement of competition law) or - irregular corporate practices (related-party
transactions).
6Why transparency of ownership structures matters
takeover law
- Special concerns under takeover law
- Transparency of ownership structures is important
for a correct functioning of market for corporate
control. - All concert parties have to be described in the
offer documents. - Some authors (e.g. Guido Ferrarini) argue that
there are implications in the degree of
contestability of control of listed companies.
In countries with mandatory bids, this point is
crucial.
7Why transparency of ownership structures matters
takeover law
- Special concerns under takeover law
- Here the problem also lies on the prospective
ownership structure. - Offeror has to disclose real name of person under
which instructions takeover bid is being
presented (i.e. beneficial owner of shares to be
acquired through the bid process). - Some jurisdictions impose disclosure of sources
of financing.
8How to detect beneficial ownership attribution
of voting rights
- What matters is holding of voting rights, and not
of shares. - Important to elaborate a list of situations where
holding of voting rights is deemed to exist
(fictio juris). - New Proposed Transparency EC Directive presents
us the following comprehensive approach
EC regime is currently under revision.
9Attribution of voting rights Proposed EC
Directive
- (a) voting rights held by a third party with whom
that person or entity has concluded an effective
agreement, which obliges them to adopt, by
concerted exercise of the voting rights they
hold, a lasting common policy towards the
management of the issuer in question - (b) voting rights held by a third party under an
effective agreement concluded with that person or
entity providing for the temporary transfer for
consideration of the voting rights in question - (c) voting rights attaching to shares which are
lodged as collateral with that person or entity,
provided the latter controls the voting rights
and declares its intention of exercising them - (d) voting rights attaching to shares in which
that person or entity has the life interest - (e) voting rights which are held, or which may be
exercised within the meaning of points (a) to
(d), by an undertaking controlled by that person
or entity - (f) voting rights attaching to shares deposited
with that person or entity which the latter can
exercise at its discretion in the absence of
specific instructions from the security holders - (g) voting rights which that person or entity or
one of the parties mentioned in points (a) to (e)
is required to sell, on the sole initiative of a
third person, or is entitled to acquire, on his
own initiative, under a formal agreement - (h) voting rights which that person or entity may
exercise as a proxy according to common
instructions from securities holders.
10How to enforce rules on transparent ownership
structure
- The Portuguese solution
- Duty to disclose shareholder agreements whose
percentage of votes involved is higher than 2 of
publicly-held companies. - Such duty is binding to all parties in the
agreement. - Besides administrative fines for non-compliance,
a companys decision can be declared as void if
majority is obtained due to votes of shareholders
that entered into a non-disclosed agreement.
Enforcement is also decisive in terms of
transparency of ownership structures.
11How to enforce rules on transparent ownership
structure
- The Portuguese solution
- In Portugal, a 2001 reform has brought up
interesting changes in this respect. - If beneficial ownership is not disclosed, the
market authority can issue a public declaration
qualifying some shareholding as not transparent. - Consequently, voting rights therein attached
become suspended. - This solution has proved to be very effective.
Enforcement is also decisive in terms of
transparency of ownership structures.
12Conclusion
- Disclosure system should
- Be coherent and easily understandable by
shareholders - Encompass adequate articulation with takeover
law - Imply a catalogue of situations where beneficial
ownership is deemed to exist - Involve the Internet as a means of disseminating
accessible and timely information - Provide the necessary powers to market
authorities - Be enforced effectively (i) through
administrative fines and (ii) through rules that
affect shareholders rights if disclosure duties
are not complied.