Ottawa Citizen

CSA looks to ease regulatory burden

- BARBARA SHECTER

Canadian securities regulators are kicking off a sweeping consultati­on aimed at reducing the regulatory burden on companies.

The review comes as the administra­tion of U.S. President Donald Trump seeks to review and possibly repeal a raft of regulation­s, including those put in place in the U.S. after the financial crisis of 2008.

The Canadian Securities Administra­tors say the purpose of their consultati­on is “to identify and consider areas of securities legislatio­n … that could benefit from a reduction of undue regulatory burden, without compromisi­ng investor protection or the efficiency of the capital market.”

The review covers all reporting issuers, other than investment funds. A reporting issuer is any corporatio­n that has issued securities to the public, and is therefore subject to continuous disclosure requiremen­ts under securities law.

“As capital markets evolve, our approach to regulation needs to reflect the realities of business for Canadian reporting issuers to remain competitiv­e,” the CSA, an umbrella group for the country’s provincial and territoria­l market watchdogs, said Thursday in a 22-page consultati­on document.

The review will consider options to reduce the regulatory burdens associated with both capital raising in the public markets, such as prospectus related requiremen­ts, and the ongoing costs of remaining a reporting issuer, including continuous disclosure requiremen­ts.

Among the ideas under considerat­ion are ways to streamline public offerings and prospectus filing requiremen­ts, and reduce the audited financial statement requiremen­ts in IPO prospectus documents. Regulators are also pondering permitting semi-annual reporting and reducing disclosure requiremen­ts in annual and interim filings.

Considerat­ion is also being given to whether longer deadlines and exemptions from filing certain documents should be extended to smaller reporting issuers based on the size of their assets, revenue, or market capitaliza­tion, rather than whether or not they are listed on a senior securities exchange such as the Toronto Stock Exchange.

“With a median market capitaliza­tion of $112 million for reporting issuers listed on the TSX, a number of TSX-listed reporting issuers could likely benefit from reduced reporting requiremen­ts if we were to adopt a size-based distinctio­n similar to the criteria for smaller reporting companies under the (U.S.) SEC rules,” the consultati­on paper says.

It does not promise anything specific, but says regulatory requiremen­ts should be balanced against the significan­ce of regulatory objectives sought and the value provided to investors.

“We are seeking feedback from market participan­ts and stakeholde­rs to identify specific areas of securities legislatio­n where the regulatory burden on reporting issuers may be out of proportion to the regulatory objectives sought to be achieved,” the CSA said.

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