Compliance
SEC Mulls Greater Disclosures From Private Companies – Report

A broad theme in investment over the past decade and beyond has been a relative shift from public to private markets. Ironically, the popularity of ESG investing highlights how the "G" – governance – works when large companies aren't required to disclose much information to the public. Lawmakers want this to change.
The US Securities
and Exchange Commission is preparing to make private
companies become more transparent about their activities, tapping
into concerns that a shift from publicly listed to privately held
firms has made corporate life more opaque.
The regulator has started to work on a plan to require more
private companies to routinely disclose information about their
finances and operations, according to a semi-annual rule-making
agenda and people familiar with the matter, the Wall Street
Journal said (January 11). The SEC is also considering
tightening the qualifications that investors must have to access
private markets and increasing the amount of information that
some non-public companies must file with the agency, the
WSJ said.
Democratic SEC Commissioner Allison Lee, who has called for the
change, reportedly warned that large private firms can "have a
huge impact on thousands of people’s lives with absolutely no
visibility for investors, employees and their unions, regulators,
or the public. I’m not interested in forcing medium- and
small-sized companies into the reporting regime," she is quoted
as saying.
Such a move fits with SEC chair Gary Gensler taking a
more aggressive line as a regulator across several fields
since taking up the post a year ago.
With more firms choosing to stay private for longer before going
to IPO, sometimes for reasons such as corporate reporting
requirements on listed firms, the shift has arguably made
business less transparent. This trend comes, ironically, at a
time when ESG investing is all the rage. Yet the “G” in ESG –
governance – is often about accountability and openness.
The WSJ report said the SEC’s move is at an early stage,
but it is likely to be resisted by Silicon Valley and other
sectors, such as oil and natural-gas infrastructure, that rely
heavily on funding from private markets. Young firms typically
attract the money they need to grow from venture-capital funds,
private-equity firms and wealthy individuals.
The growth in private markets has been a strong trend for some
time. Private market investments – such as private equity and
credit – have exploded 30-fold since 2000 to $30.5 trillion
today. A report in November 2020 by Investor's Business
Daily noted that the Wilshire 5000 index of investible
stocks listed on US markets totaled just 3,530, falling 1 per
cent from 2019. Over five years, that figure fell 7 per cent, and
collapsed by half over 20 years. There are several forces at
work, amongst which are the regulatory costs of being a listed
business and the pressure of delivering quarterly results.
If the SEC does press for more disclosures and reporting, this
has implications for wealth managers and organizations such as
family offices which are often closely involved in private
capital markets.
Much has changed since the Trump adminstration, where the regime
made a point of retiring two regulations for every new one
enacted. SEC chair Gensler does appear to favor a more activist
role for the SEC. If there is one consistent theme since Gensler
took up office in April 2021, it is that he’s determined to push
for more transparency over fees and costs, go after conflicts of
interest, and push back against financial market activity that he
considers detract from the wider economy. The pace of activity in
terms of speeches, commentaries and consultations has been brisk.
For example, late in 2021 Gensler said that the SEC was
taking a closer look at retail trading apps such as Robinhood and
the sector of special purpose acquisition companies (SPACs).