The Oneida Daily Dispatch (Oneida, NY)

Shutdown slows Uber, Lyft and other IPOs

- ByMarcy Gordon

WASHINGTON (AP) >> The partial government shutdown is slowing plans by some companies to issue stock to the public and potentiall­y cutting off a key source of capital for the financial markets.

The shutdown, now in its fourth week, has all but darkened the Securities and Exchange Commission, the government agency that oversees the markets. Most of the SEC’s 4,400-person staff is furloughed, including lawyers and other staffers who must approve corporate paperwork for initial public offerings. This process typically takes two to three months.

Companies that have been moving toward issuing initial public offerings of stock in the coming months include such high-profile names as the ride hailing firms Uber and Lyft and the imageshari­ng platform Pinterest. Among the others are biotech and health sciences companies that depend on funding from the public markets that finance IPOs.

Billions of dollars are at stake for the companies as well as millions in fees for the Wall Street firms that facilitate the deals.

Brian Lane, a securities lawyer at Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher who led the SEC’s corporatio­n finance division in the late 1990s, said some IPOs planned for spring could be delayed until fall if the shutdown persists. For larger companies with ample cash reserves, the problem is manageable, Lane said. But smaller companies that lack deep sources of funding from the private credit markets or from venture capitalist­s could be hurt.

James Cox, a professor of securities law at Duke University, suggested that some IPOs eyed for the spring could end up being delayed as long as into 2020.

Representa­tives for Uber declined to comment, and those for Lyft and Pinterest didn’t respond to requests for comment.

More than 800,000 federal employees, over half of them still on the job, missed their first paycheck Friday as the closure became the longest government shutdown of any kind in U.S. history. President Donald Trump has rejected suggestion­s that he agree to temporaril­y reopen the government while negotiatin­g with Democrats on the wall along the Mexican border that he has demanded.

Here’s a closer look at how the shutdown is hampering the SEC’s work:

AGENCY STAFFING

Only a small SEC staff deemed essential is in place to monitor the markets and, in the agency’s words, “respond to emergency situations” involving market integrity and investor protection, including law enforcemen­t. The SEC’s online financial reporting service for companies, known as Edgar and widely used by investors, continues to operate normally.

About 285 agency employees are still working, including around 110 in law enforcemen­t, according to the SEC’s shutdown plan.

“Our staff continues to monitor the asset management space, track market activity, and watch for systems issues or other events that could disrupt the fair and orderly operation of the securities markets,” the SEC said in a statement.

Before the shutdown took effect late last month, the SEC had urged companies to request that paperwork for public stock offerings already in the pipeline be expedited. The agency said it approved roughly a dozen such registrati­on statements.

SMALLER COMPANIES HURT?

For the largest companies that were planning public stock offerings, “it’s not the end of the world,” said Alan Denenberg, a corporate lawyer who heads David Polk’s office in tech-centric Northern California. Companies with deep pockets, like Uber, Lyft and Pinterest, can ride out the delay, he said. That’s in contrast to perhaps dozens of smaller biotech and health sciences companies that hoped to launch IPOs within a few months. Their viability depends on access to the public capital markets.

“You’ re suddenly thrown into a tailspin,” Denenberg said.

The consequenc­es of these companies’ delayed access to capital can affect ordinary households, he noted. There may be clinical trials for drugs or devices that the companies won’t be able to help finance, a delay that would slow the public’s access to potential breakthrou­ghs.

OPEN SEASON FOR FRAUD?

With all but about 10 percent of the SEC’s enforcemen­t attorneys and staffers idled, some see warning lights involving white-collar crime flashing.

The shutdown is “essentiall­y providing fraudsters and schemers with a free pass to swindle investors and small businesses,” said Rep. Maxine Waters, the California Democrat who now chairs the U.S. House Financial Services Committee, which oversees the securities industry.

With its depleted staff, the SEC can’t monitor the activities of the 26,000 investment firms, brokerages and stock exchanges that are registered with the agency, Waters said on the House f loor recently. “Worse, the SEC is unable to hold bad actors accountabl­e through most enforcemen­t actions, preventing harmed investors from obtaining relief.”

Cox, the Duke University professor, doesn’t regard the problem as urgent — at least not yet.

“It’s smoldering, but it’s not flaming,” he said. A notable exception could be enforcemen­t cases for which the statute of limitation­s will soon run out, thereby preventing the SEC staff from pursuing those cases, Cox noted.

In a case Tuesday, the SEC announced civil charges against a Ukrainian man and eight other individual­s and companies in a scheme to profit by hacking into the Edgar computer system to steal companies’ earnings reports before their public release. They are accused of reaping $4.1 million from the scheme.

SHAREHOLDE­R PROPOSALS

The shutdown is preventing the SEC staff from processing or ruling on the hundreds of shareholde­r proposals that are challenged by companies each year. With the spring annual-meeting season a few months away, this means the agency can’t determine whether such proposals can be placed on the proxy ballots that companies issue to shareholde­rs.

 ?? AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE ?? Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., leaves the chamber after accusing Democrats of turning President Donald Trump’s promised border wall into “something evil” to avoid dealing with the security and humanitari­an crisis at the southern border.
AP PHOTO/J. SCOTT APPLEWHITE Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnell, R-Ky., leaves the chamber after accusing Democrats of turning President Donald Trump’s promised border wall into “something evil” to avoid dealing with the security and humanitari­an crisis at the southern border.

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