Title: Mexico
1Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público
Mexicos New Securities Law
2Financial Sector Depth is highly correlated with
income percapita.
Fuente i) Profundización financiera Levine, et.
al., ii) PIB per cápita (Banco Mundial)
2004 Cifras de México al 2005 Banxico e INEGI
3At the beginning of the administration the
financial sector was not contributing to economic
growth
- A economy requires a set of rules and
institutions that allow markets to function
efficiently. - Five years into the administration, structural
reform in the financial sector is far advanced
and turns the financial sector into an engine for
growth. - There have been over 35 legislative initiatives
and many other regulatory modifications that have
reduced vulnerability and fostered the
development of financial markets - Increase the amount and quality of savings.
- Improve traditional and non-traditional financial
intermediation (banking, capital, and corporate
debt as well as venture capital and private
equity).
4The importance of the new Law
- In today's globalized financial markets, stock
exchanges compete for funds thereby reducing the
country's cost of capital. - Investors look for the markets with the greatest
liquidity, transparency, information, and
shareholder rights. - Corporate governance is an evolving topic that
requires continuous adjustments. The U.S.
corporate scandals are the latest in a series of
corporate governance reforms. - Despite many adjustments to the 1974 Securities
legislation, the Mexican Stock exchange, and
capital investments in general did not develop to
their potential. Two examples
5Example 1 Mexico's stock market is small by
almost any measure.
Fuente Datos internacionales Empresas listadas
(FIBV y FIB), Población (Banco Mundial) Cifras al
2003. Mexico BMV e INEGI cifras a octubre.
Fuente Valor de Capitalización (BMV), PIB (Banco
Mundial) Cifras al 2004 (otros países) y
junio de 2005 para México.
6Example 2 Worldwide there are more than 100
billion dollars invested in private equity.
Mexico attracts only 0.1 of the total
- Mexico attracts only México 10 of the private
equity inflows to Latin America, contrasting with
close to 30 of the foreign direct investment in
that region.
Source NVCA Yearbook 2004.
7The World Bank Doing Business Survey places
México at 125 out of 145 countries in investor
protection
9.7
10
Minority Protection Index
9.3
8.7
9
8.3
8
6.7
7
6.3
Régimen Actual
6
6
5.7
5.7
5.7
6
5.3
5.3
5
5
4.7
4.7
4.7
5
4.3
4.3
4
3.7
3.7
3.7
3.7
4
3.3
3
3
2.3
2
0.7
1
0
EUA 6
Perú 22
India 29
Chile 38
Brasil 54
Corea 79
Haití 123
Japón 15
Canadá 3
Bolivia 98
China 100
Singapur 2
Turquía 75
Colombia 37
Senegal 126
Tailandia 33
Paraguay 46
Argentina 52
Ecuador 113
MEXICO 125
Jordania 124
Latinoamérica
Nicaragua 73
N. Zelandia 1
Honduras 129
Venezuela 142
El Salvador 83
Afganistán 145
Costa Rica 134
Fuente Doing Business 2006, Banco Mundial.
8Main objectives of the new Securities Law
- The new Law attempts to increase the depth of the
Stock market by increasing the supply of listed
firms and the demand for their stock - Promotes the introduction of new companies into
de stock market by making private equity
investments more attractive and easing the
process for going pubic. - Improves transparency, minority rights, and
radically modernizes the corporate structure of
listed companies in line with international
practices.
9Index
- Promote venture capital and private equity
- Public Companies
- Other topics
- Intermediaries
- Crime/offenses and sanctions
- Reallocation of functions between the SHCP and
the CNBV
10Securities Markets CompaniesBroadening the scope
Public companies
Currently, only public companies, are subject to
modern corporate governance standards
The Law does not allow the family companies to
engage in certain activities that are essential
for private equity transactions
Investor protection and/or information disclosure
standards
Common Company (Sociedad Anónima, a figure
similar to the corporation in the US. In many
cases a family company.)
-
11The New Law introduces the Sociedad Anónima
Promotora de Inversión, SAPI (Investment
Promoter Company) to promote the access of medium
size companies to the securities markets and to
reduce their gap with public companies.
Public Company
An optional regime that will signal investors
that the company has good corporate governance
standards and provides investor protection.
Sociedad Anónima Promotora de Inversión
Investor protection and/or information disclosure
standards
Common Company (Sociedad Anónima, in many cases a
family company)
-
12Broadening the scope of good corporate practices
beyond the stock market through the new
Securities Market Law.
- Currently, medium and small enterprises (SMEs)
are not attractive to private equity investors
because they lack modern corporate governance
structures and therefore do not provide enough
legal certainty. - The new Securities Law introduces a new type of
firm regime, whose adoption is optional, in order
to - Improve investors corporate rights.
- Improve transparency.
- Include more exit options for those who invest
in private equity. - Companies that adopt this regime will signal
potential investors that the company is a good
recipient of private equity with a credible legal
commitment to honor the corporate rights of
investors.
13Characteristics of the Sociedad anónima
promotora de inversión (SAPI)
- The SAPI will have enhanced corporate governance,
minority rights, and information disclosure
standards in exchange for - Exemptions from the General Law of Corporations
(Ley General de Sociedades Mercantiles (LGSM)) to
allow essential activities for private equity
transactions - Shareholders voting agreements
- Tag-along and drag-along rights
- Buy back mechanisms for the redemption of shares
- Restrictions to preemptive and exit rights
- The possibility to be listed in the stock
exchange. The SAPI will have a three year grace
period to converge to the public companies
standards. These will create a breeding ground of
companies to boost the securities markets. - The types of investors that will be allowed to
invest in SAPIs are institutional investors,
qualified investors (as defined in the
Securities Markets Law), and those investors that
explicitly acknowledge that they know the risks
of investing in these types of companies.
14Minorities rights
Type of company
Percentage of shareholders needed
- 10 to appoint board members and to call for
shareholders meetings. - 5 for civil action against board members and
directors. - 20 for judiciary opposition to the meetings
resolutions. - 10 to postpone voting.
Public Company
- 10 to appoint board members and to call for
extraordinary shareholders meetings. - 15 for civil action against board members and
directors. - 20 for judiciary opposition to the meetings
resolutions - 10 to postpone voting.
SAPI (Public and private)
Common Company (Sociedad Anónima)
- 25 to appoint a board member and the
commissary. - 33 to call for shareholder meetings, to postpone
voting, for civil action against the board, and
for the judiciary opposition to meetings
resolutions.
NO CHANGE
15Information disclosure
Type of company
- Relevance principle.
- Prospectus.
- Annual report.
- Audited annual financial statements.
- Quarterly financial statements with annexes.
Public Company
- Relevance principle.
- Prospectus.
- Simplified annual report.
- Audited annual financial statements
- Quarterly financial statements without annexes.
SAPI (In transit towards a public company)
SAPI
Common Company
NO CHANGE The regime is incompatible with market
practices.
16Index
- Promote venture capital and private equity
- Public Companies
- Other topics
- Intermediaries
- Crime/offenses and sanctions
- Reallocation of functions between the SHCP and
the CNBV
17The agency problem in México is fundamentally
different
Corporate governance legislation must address
fundamentally different conflicts of interest but
it must consider international standards.
Managers/Minority shareholders with corporate
control
18Public companies Conglomerates
- At the conglomerate level, the scope of the law
will reach the subsidiary companies on the
following aspects - Information disclosure requirements
- Relevant transactions and transactions with
related parties. - Consolidated accounting (which already applies).
19(No Transcript)
20Clarification of the responsibility regime of
board members, directors, auditors, and
controlling shareholders.
- Currently, board members, directors and
shareholders have broad and imprecise
responsibility benchmarks. They have to act
according to the mandate of taking care of the
business as if it was their own. - Proposal
Act in good faith, creating company value,
without favoring a particular group of
shareholders, following diligence and fiduciary
duties that are clearly defined in the law.
Obligations
If he acts in bad faith or with conflict of
interest.
Legal Responsibilities
Demonstrate that acts were done in a reasonable
way (business judgment rule)
Exceptions
21Diligence and fiduciary duties
- Lack of diligence is considered when a board
member - Does not attend, without a justification, board
or committee meetings. - Does not disclose to the board or to the
committees, information that s(he) knows and
that is necessary to make decisions, unless s(he)
must keep it as secret. - Disloyalty is considered when a board member
- Favors a shareholder a group of shareholders at
the expense of others. - Votes or makes decisions with conflicts of
interest. - Makes inappropriate use of privileged information.
22Index
- Promote venture capital and private equity
- Public Companies
- Other topics
- Intermediaries
- Crime/offenses and sanctions
- Reallocation of functions between the SHCP and
the CNBV
23Other Innovations contained in the Law
- Flexibility in the investment bank regime and
clarification of its resolution process. - Clarify and improve de regime violations regime
- Five categories of sanctions without increasing
the maximum and minimum. - A new chapter on notifications to improve the
application of the law. - The CNBV will be able to accept or deny the
existance of an investigation. - Three new criminal offenses are introduced
- Violate the public offerings rule (one share one
price). - Continue to operate when ordered not to.
- Fraudulent administration.
- Reassignment of powers between the Ministry and
the CNBV to improve and streamline supervision.
24Index
- Promote venture capital and private equity
- Public Companies
- Other topics
- Intermediaries
- Crime/offenses and sanctions
- Reallocation of functions between the SHCP and
the CNBV
25The World Bank study indicates a substantial
improvement in Mexico's investor protection with
the approval of the new Securities Law
Source Doing business in 2006. Note The
exercise for the new Law was made by the SHCP in
collaboration with the World Bank, it is
preliminary and subject to change.
26The investor protection index and the size of the
stock market are correlated.
Source i) Market capitalization, BMV ii) GCP
World Development Indicators, World Bank and for
Mexican data INEGI iii) Investor protection
index Doing Business 2006, World Bank.
27Final Thoughts
- Mexico has achieved macroeconomic stability which
is a necessary but not suffieicient condition for
high growth. - Successful financial markets have a set of laws
and institutions which allow them to be efficient
and with sound rule of law. - Five years into the administration, financial
sector reform in Mexico has progressed
substantially. - The new Securities Market Law will foster the
development of capital markets for both public
and private companies reducing financing costs.
28Secretaría de Hacienda y Crédito Público
Mexicos New Securities Law
29Sanciones y Delitos
- Se establece un catalogo de infracciones que
contiene cinco grandes categorías en los que se
agrupan las conductas infractoras en función de
su gravedad que no implica ampliar los rangos de
las sanciones vigentes (de 200 a 100,000 días de
salario mínimo). - Los delitos prescriben en 3 años cuando se tuvo
conocimiento y 5 años a partir de que se
cometieron si no fueron descubiertos. - Se considera reincidente al infractor, cuando
dentro de los dos años siguientes incurra en la
misma violación. - Se incorpora un nuevos mecanismos de notificación
para darle certidumbre a los particulares y a la
autoridad. - La Comisión puede abstenerse de emitir opinión de
delito cuando los daños causados no excedan
25,000 días, y se haya reparado el daño, y el
infractor no sea reincidente, y el delito no sea
grave, y los responsables colaboren con las
autoridades. - La CNBV podrá afirmar o negar la existencia de
investigaciones en relación a información
relevante revelada al mercado, así como dar a
conocer las sanciones que haya impuesto una vez
que hayan quedado firmes y ajustándose a los
lineamientos de la Junta de Gobierno.
30Sanciones y Delitos (cont)
- Se precisaron y ampliaron los tipos penales
vigentes. - Se incorporaron tres nuevos delitos
- Violar la regla de ofertas públicas de
adquisición (OPAs), pagando un premio o
sobreprecio por el control de una sociedad. - Desempeñar funciones estando inhabilitado o
suspendido. - Incurrir en administración fraudulenta.
31Clarificación y precisión de los delitos
32Las alteraciones propuestas debilitan
sustancialmente la Iniciativa
- No revelar al mercado cuando el Consejo tome una
decisión contraria a la de los Comités los hace
irrelevantes. La ley ya contempla que si hay
diferencias se publiquen los dos puntos de vista. - Establecer que la CNBV sólo puede admitir o negar
que existe una investigación sobre hechos
públicos hasta que exista un fallo podría
implicar que el mercado no esté debidamente
informado. - Limitar la definición de evento relevante a una
lista implica que gran parte de la información no
sea revelada al mercado y nulifica el régimen de
información privilegiada y libera de
responsabilidad a todos los casos en proceso. - Introducir un consejero no independiente al
Comité de Auditoria equivale a convertir a la
administración en juez y parte de su vigilancia.
33El estudio del Banco Mundial también indica que
si se aprueban los cambios como están planteados,
Mexico caería del lugar 125 al 132.
Fuente Doing business in 2006. Nota El
ejercicio para la nueva ley es preliminar y
sujeto a revisión.
34El índice de gobierno corporativo/ protección a
los inversionistas está altamente correlacionado
con el tamaño del mercado de capitales
Fuente i) Valor de Capitalización Indicador
Bursátil BMV ii) PIB World Development
Indicators, Banco Mundial e INEGI para México
iii) Indice de protección a los inversionistas
Doing Business 2006. Banco Mundial.
35II. Redefinición de funciones de la administración
Consejo de Administración
Funciones Actuales
Funciones Propuestas
- Responsable de la administración y de las
operaciones diarias de la empresa. - Responsable de la existencia y mantenimiento de
los sistemas de contabilidad, control y registro.
- Establece estrategia de negocio.
- Vigila gestión y conducción de la sociedad y las
empresas morales que ésta controla y desempeño de
directivos. - Aprueba operaciones relevantes o con personas
relacionadas. - Aprueba nombramientos y retribuciones al director
general y políticas en esta materia para los
directivos relevantes. - Aprueba políticas para el uso o goce de los
bienes por parte de personas relacionadas. - Designa a miembros de comités (prácticas
societarias y auditoría). - Vigila cumplimiento de acuerdos de la asamblea.
36Director General y directivos
Funciones Actuales
Funciones Propuestas
- Gestión conducción y ejecución de operaciones
diarias del negocio. - Proponer al comité de auditoría, lineamientos de
control interno. - Suscribir y difundir información relevante y
eventos que deban ser revelados al público. - Mantenimiento de los sistemas de contabilidad,
registro e información. - Presentar al consejo un informe de labores.
- Vigilar cumplimiento de acuerdos del consejo y
asamblea. - Establecer mecanismos para verificar el apego a
la normativa aplicable.
- Sin responsabilidades específicas, son nombrados
para ejercer las facultades que le sean
encomendadas apoyando al Consejo de
Administración.
37Funciones de Vigilancia
Desaparece y se reasignan sus funciones
Comisario
Funciones actuales (Comisario)
Órgano que las asume
- Emite informe sobre la veracidad de la
información presentada por el consejo a la
asamblea. - Asiste a sesiones del consejo.
- Vigila ilimitadamente las operaciones de la
sociedad. - Exige a administradores información financiera.
- Convoca a asambleas de accionistas y propone
puntos para el orden del día. - Propone puntos para el orden del día de las
sesiones del consejo.
Auditor Externo
Consejo de Administración
Comités auditoría y prácticas societarias
38Excluyentes de responsabilidad de los consejeros
y directivos regla de juicio de negocios.
- Tratándose de la aprobación de operaciones que
causen un daño o perjuicio a la sociedad, los
consejeros, directores generales y directivos
relevantes no serán responsables cuando - Elijan la alternativa más adecuada, a su leal
saber y entender, con base en la información
disponible. - Cuando los efectos patrimoniales negativos
derivados de su decisión no hayan sido
previsibles. - Cumplan los acuerdos de la asamblea de
accionistas, siempre que estos no sean
violatorios de la Ley. - Voten en sesiones del consejo o tomen decisiones
basados en la información u opiniones de los
directivos relevantes o de expertos
independientes cuya capacidad y credibilidad no
ofrezcan motivo razonable para la duda.
39Las Sociedades del mercado de valoresAmpliando
el alcance
Objetivo de la Nueva Ley del Mercado de Valores
Empresas que Cotizan en Bolsa
Empresas LGSM
Sociedad Anónima Bursátil
Revelación de Información
Sociedad Anónima
Sociedades Promotoras de Inversión Privada
Bursátil
Empresas LMV
Empresa Familiar
Con la introducción de la Sociedad Promotora de
Inversión se promueve el acceso de las empresas
medianas al mercado de valores y se reduce la
brecha con las empresas bursátiles
-
-
Protección de Minorías