(a) Reports by issuer of security; contents. Every issuer of a security
registered pursuant to section 12 of this title shall file with the
Commission, in accordance with such rules and regulations as the Commission
may prescribe as necessary or appropriate for the proper protection
of investors and to insure fair dealing in the security—
(1) such information and documents
(and such copies thereof) as the Commission shall require to keep
reasonably current the information and documents required to be included
in or filed with an application or registration statement filed pursuant
to section 12, except that the Commission may not require the filing
of any material contract wholly executed before July 1, 1962.
(2) such annual reports (and
such copies thereof), certified if required by the rules and regulations
of the Commission by independent public accountants, and such quarterly
reports (and such copies thereof), as the Commission may prescribe.
Every issuer of a security registered on
a national securities exchange shall also file a duplicate original
of such information, documents, and reports with the exchange. In
any registration statement, periodic report, or other reports to be
filed with the Commission, an emerging growth company need not present
selected financial data in accordance with section 229.301 of title
17, Code of Federal Regulations, for any period prior to the earliest
audited period presented in connection with its first registration
statement that became effective under this Act or the Securities Act
of 1933 and, with respect to any such statement or reports, an emerging
growth company may not be required to comply with any new or revised
financial accounting standard until such date that a company that
is not an issuer (as defined under section 2(a) of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002 (15 U.S.C. 7201(a))) is required to comply with such new
or revised accounting standard, if such standard applies to companies
that are not issuers.
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(b) Form
of report; books, records, and internal accounting; directives.
(1) The Commission may prescribe,
in regard to reports made pursuant to this title, the form or forms
in which the required information shall be set forth, the items or
details to be shown in the balance sheet and the earnings statement,
and the methods to be followed in the preparation of reports, in the
appraisal or valuation of assets and liabilities, in the determination
of depreciation and depletion, in the differentiation of recurring
and nonrecurring income, in the differentiation of investment and
operating income, and in the preparation, where the Commission deems
it necessary or desirable, of separate and/or consolidated balance
sheets or income accounts of any person directly or indirectly controlling
or controlled by the issuer, or any person under direct or indirect
common control with the issuer; but in the case of the reports of
any person whose methods of accounting are prescribed under the provisions
of any law of the United States, or any rule or regulation thereunder,
the rules and regulations of the Commission with respect to reports
shall not be inconsistent with the requirements imposed by such law
or rule or regulation in respect of the same subject matter (except that such
rules and regulations of the Commission may be inconsistent with such
requirements to the extent that the Commission determines that the
public interest or the protection of investors so requires).
5-090
(2) Every issuer which has a class of securities
registered pursuant to section 12 of this title and every issuer which
is required to file reports pursuant to section 15(d) of this title
shall—
(A) make and keep books, records, and
accounts, which, in reasonable detail, accurately and fairly reflect
the transactions and dispositions of the assets of the issuer;
(B) devise and maintain
a system of internal accounting controls sufficient to provide reasonable
assurances that—
(i) transactions are executed in accordance
with management’s general or specific authorization;
(ii) transactions are recorded
as necessary (I) to permit preparation of financial statements in
conformity with generally accepted accounting principles or any other
criteria applicable to such statements, and (II) to maintain accountability
for assets;
(iii) access
to assets is permitted only in accordance with management’s general
or specific authorization; and
(iv) the recorded accountability for assets
is compared with the existing assets at reasonable intervals and appropriate
action is taken with respect to any differences; and
(C) notwithstanding
any other provision of law, pay the allocable share of such issuer
of a reasonable annual accounting support fee or fees, determined
in accordance with section 109 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002.
5-091
(3) (A) With respect to
matters concerning the national security of the United States, no
duty or liability under paragraph (2) of this subsection shall be
imposed upon any person acting in cooperation with the head of any
Federal department or agency responsible for such matters if such
act in cooperation with such head of a department or agency was done
upon the specific, written directive of the head of such department
or agency pursuant to Presidential authority to issue such directives.
Each directive issued under this paragraph shall set forth the specific
facts and circumstances with respect to which the provisions of this
paragraph are to be invoked. Each such directive shall, unless renewed
in writing, expire one year after the date of issuance.
(B) Each head of a Federal
department or agency of the United States who issues a directive pursuant
to this paragraph shall maintain a complete file of all such directives
and shall, on October 1 of each year, transmit a summary of matters
covered by such directives in force at any time during the previous
year to the Permanent Select Committee on Intelligence of the House
of Representatives and the Select Committee on Intelligence of the
Senate.
5-091.1
(4) No
criminal liability shall be imposed for failing to comply with the
requirements of paragraph (2) of this subsection except as provided
in paragraph (5) of this subsection.
(5) No person shall knowingly circumvent
or knowingly fail to implement a system of internal accounting controls
or knowingly falsify any book, record, or account described in paragraph
(2).
5-091.2
(6) Where an issuer which
has a class of securities registered pursuant to section 12 of this
title or an issuer which is required to file reports pursuant to section
15(d) of this title holds 50 per centum or less of the voting power
with respect to a domestic or foreign firm, the provisions of paragraph
(2) require only that the issuer proceed in good faith to use its
influence, to the extent reasonable under the issuer’s circumstances,
to cause such domestic or foreign firm to devise and maintain a system
of internal accounting controls consistent with paragraph (2). Such
circumstances include the relative degree of the issuer’s ownership
of the domestic or foreign firm and the laws and practices governing
the business operations of the country in which such firm is located.
An issuer which demonstrates good faith efforts to use such influence
shall be conclusively presumed to have complied with the requirements
of paragraph (2).
(7)
For the purpose of paragraph (2) of this subsection, the terms “reasonable
assurances” and “reasonable detail” mean such level
of detail and degree of assurance as would satisfy prudent officials
in the conduct of their own affairs.
5-092
(c) Alternative reports. If in the judgment
of the Commission any report required under subsection (a) is inapplicable
to any specified class or classes of issuers, the Commission shall
require in lieu thereof the submission of such reports of comparable
character as it may deem applicable to such class or classes of issuers.
5-093
(d) Reports by persons acquiring
more than five per centum of certain classes of securities.
(1) Any person who, after acquiring directly
or indirectly the beneficial ownership of any equity security of a
class which is registered pursuant to section 6 of this title, or
any equity security of an insurance company which would have been
required to be so registered except for the exemption contained in
section 12(g)(2)(G) of this title, or any equity security issued by
a closed-end investment company registered under the Investment Company
Act of 1940 or any equity security issued by a Native Corporation
pursuant to section 37(d)(6) of the Alaska Native Claims Settlement
Act, or otherwise becomes or is deemed to become a beneficial owner
of any of the foregoing upon the purchase or sale of a security-based
swap that the Commission may define by rule, and is directly or indirectly
the beneficial owner of more than 5 per centum of such class shall,
within ten days after such acquisition, or within such shorter time
as the Commission may establish by rule, file with the Commission,
a statement containing such of the following information, and such
additional information, as the Commission may by rules and regulations,
prescribe as necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for
the protection of investors—
(A) the background, and
identify, residence, and citizenship of, and the nature of such beneficial
ownership by, such person and all other persons by whom or on whose
behalf the purchases have been or are to be effected,
(B) the source and amount of the funds
or other consideration used or to be used in making the purchases,
and if any part of the purchase price is represented or is to be represented
by funds or other consideration borrowed or otherwise obtained for
the purpose of acquiring, holding, or trading such security, a description
of the transaction and the names of the parties thereto, except that
where a source of funds is a loan made in the ordinary course of business
by a bank, as defined in section 3(a)(6) of this title, if the person
filing such statement so requests, the name of the bank shall not
be made available to the public.
(C) if the purpose of the purchases
or prospective purchases is to acquire control of the business of
the issuer of the securities, any plans or proposals which such persons
may have to liquidate such issuer, to sell its assets to or merge
it with any other persons, or to make any other major change in its
business or corporate structure;
(D) the number of shares of such security
which are beneficially owned, and the number of shares concerning
which there is a right to acquire, directly or indirectly, by (i)
such person, and (ii) by each associate of such person, giving the
background, identity, residence, and citizenship of each such associate;
and
(E) information
as to any contracts, arrangements, or understandings with any person
with respect to any securities of the issuer, including but not limited
to transfer of any of the securities, joint ventures, loan or option
arrangements, puts or calls, guaranties of loans, guaranties against
loss or guaranties of profits, division of losses or profits, or the
giving or withholding of proxies, naming the persons with whom such
contracts, arrangements, or understandings have been entered into,
and giving the details thereof.
5-094
(2) If any material change occurs in the
facts set forth in the statement filed with the Commission, an amendment
shall be filed with the Commission, in accordance with such rules
and regulations as the Commission may prescribe as necessary or appropriate
in the public interest or for the protection of investors.
(3) When two or more persons
act as a partnership, limited partnership, syndicate, or other group
for the purpose of acquiring, holding, or disposing of securities
of an issuer, such syndicate or group shall be deemed a “person”
for the purposes of this subsection.
(4) In determining, for purposes of this
subsection, any percentage of a class of any security, such class shall be
deemed to consist of the amount of the outstanding securities of such
class, exclusive of any securities of such class held by or for the
account of the issuer or a subsidiary of the issuer.
5-095
(5) The Commission, by rule or regulation
or by order, may permit any person to file in lieu of the statement
required by paragraph (1) of this subsection or the rules and regulations
thereunder, a notice stating the name of such person, the number of
shares of any equity securities subject to paragraph (1) which are
owned by him, the date of their acquisition and such other information
as the Commission may specify, if it appears to the Commission that
such securities were acquired by such person in the ordinary course
of his business and were not acquired for the purpose of and do not
have the effect of changing or influencing the control of the issuer
nor in connection with or as a participant in any transaction having
such purpose or effect.
5-096
(6) The
provisions of this subsection shall not apply to—
(A) any
acquisition or offer to acquire securities made or proposed to be
made by means of a registration statement under the Securities Act
of 1933;
(B) any
acquisition of the beneficial ownership of a security which, together
with all other acquisitions by the same person of securities of the
same class during the preceding twelve months, does not exceed 2 per
centum of that class;
(C) any acquisition of an equity security by the issuer of such security;
(D) any acquisition
or proposed acquisition of a security which the Commission, by rules
or regulations or by order, shall exempt from the provisions of this
subsection as not entered into for the purpose of, and not having
the effect of, changing or influencing the control of the issuer or
otherwise as not comprehended within the purposes of this subsection.
5-097
(e) Purchase
of securities by issuer.
(1) It shall be unlawful for an issuer
which has a class of equity securities registered pursuant to section
12 of this title, or which is a closed-end investment company registered
under the Investment Company Act of 1940, to purchase any equity security
issued by it if such purchase is in contravention of such rules and
regulations as the Commission, in the public interest or for the protection
of investors, may adopt (A) to define acts and practices which are
fraudulent, deceptive, or manipulative, and (B) to prescribe means
reasonably designed to prevent such acts and practices. Such rules
and regulations may require such issuer to provide holders of equity
securities of such class with such information relating to the reasons
for such purchase, the source of funds, the number of shares to be
purchased, the price to be paid for such securities, the method of
purchase, and such additional information, as the Commission deems
necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection
of investors, or which the Commission deems to be material to a determination
whether such security should be sold.
5-098
(2) For the purpose of this subsection,
a purchase by or for the issuer or any person controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with the issuer, or a purchase subject
to control of the issuer or any such person, shall be deemed to be
a purchase by the issuer. The Commission shall have power to make
rules and regulations implementing this paragraph in the public interest
and for the protection of investors, including exemptive rules and
regulations covering situations in which the Commission deems it unnecessary
or inappropriate that a purchase of the type described in this paragraph
shall be deemed to be a purchase by the issuer for purposes of some
or all of the provisions of paragraph (1) of this subsection.
(3) At the time of filing
such statement as the Commission may require by rule pursuant to paragraph
(1) of this subsection, the person making the filing shall pay to
the Commission a fee at a rate that, subject to paragraph (4) is equal
to $92 per $1,000,000 of the value of securities proposed to be purchased.
The fee shall be reduced with respect to securities in an amount equal
to any fee paid with respect to any securities issued in connection
with the proposed transaction under section 6(b) of the Securities
Act of 1933, or the fee paid under that section shall be reduced in
an amount equal to the fee paid to the Commission in connection with
such transaction under this paragraph.
5-098.1
(4) For each fiscal year, the Commission
shall by order adjust the rate required by paragraph (3) for such
fiscal year to a rate that is equal to the rate (expressed in dollars
per million) that is applicable under section 6(b) of the Securities
Act of 1933 for such fiscal year.
(5) Fees collected pursuant to this subsection
for fiscal year 2012 and each fiscal year thereafter shall be deposited
and credited as general revenue of the Treasury and shall not be available
for obligation.
(6)
In exercising its authority under this subsection, the Commission
shall not be required to comply with the provisions of section 553
of title 5, United States Code. An adjusted rate prescribed under
paragraph (4) shall be published and take effect in accordance with
section 6(b) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77f(b)).
(7) The rates per $1,000,000
required by this subsection shall be applied pro rata to amounts and
balances of less than $1,000,000.
5-099
(f) Reports by institutional investment managers.
(1) Every institutional investment
manager which uses the mails, or any means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce in the course of its business as an institutional investment
manager and which exercises investment discretion with respect to
accounts holding equity securities of a class described in subsection
(d)(1) of this section or otherwise becomes or is deemed to become
a beneficial owner of any security of a class described in subsection
(d)(1) upon the purchase or sale of a security-based swap that the
Commission may define by rule, having an aggregate fair market value
on the last trading day in any of the preceding twelve months of at
least $100,000,000 or such lesser amount (but in no case less than
$10,000,000) as the Commission, by rule, may determine, shall file
reports with the Commission in such form, for such periods, and at
such times after the end of such periods as the Commission, by rule,
may prescribe, but in no event shall such reports be filed for periods
longer than one year or shorter than one quarter. Such reports shall
include for each such equity security held on the last day of the
reporting period by accounts (in aggregate or by type as the Commission,
by rule, may prescribe) with respect to which the institutional investment
manager exercises investment discretion (other than securities held
in amounts which the Commission, by rule, determines to be insignificant
for purposes of this subsection), the name of the issuer and the title,
class, CUSIP number, number of shares or principal amount, and aggregate
fair market value of each such security. Such reports may also include
for accounts (in aggregate or by type) with respect to which the institutional
investment manager exercises investment discretion such of the following
information as the Commission, by rule, prescribes—
(A) the name
of the issuer and the title, class, CUSIP number, number of shares
or principal amount, and aggregate fair market value or cost or amortized
cost of each other security (other than an exempted security) held
on the last day of the reporting period by such accounts;
(B) the aggregate fair
market value or cost or amortized cost of exempted securities (in
aggregate or by class) held on the last day of the reporting period by such
accounts;
(C) the
number of shares of each equity security of a class described in section
13(d)(1) of this title held on the last day of the reporting period
by such accounts with respect to which the institutional investment
manager possesses sole or shared authority to exercise the voting
rights evidenced by such securities;
(D) the aggregate purchases and aggregate
sales during the reporting period of each security (other than an
exempted security) effected by or for such accounts; and
(E) with respect to any
transaction or series of transactions having a market value of at
least $500,000 or such other amount as the Commission, by rule, may
determine, effected during the reporting period by or for such accounts
in any equity security of a class described in section 13(d)(1) of
this title—
(i) the name of the issuer and the title,
class, and CUSIP number of the security;
(ii) the number of shares or principal amount
of the security involved in the transaction;
(iii) whether the transaction was a purchase
or sale;
(iv) the per share
price or prices at which the transaction was effected;
(v) the date or dates of the
transaction;
(vi) the date
or dates of the settlement of the transaction;
(vii) the broker or dealer through whom the
transaction was effected;
(viii) the market or markets in which the transaction was effected;
and
(ix) such other related
information as the Commission, by rule, may prescribe.
(2) The Commission
shall prescribe rules providing for the public disclosure of the name
of the issuer and the title, class, CUSIP number, aggregate amount
of the number of short sales of each security, and any additional
information determined by the Commission following the end of the
reporting period. At a minimum, such public disclosure shall occur
every month.
5-100
(3) The Commission, by
rule, or order, may exempt, conditionally or unconditionally, any
institutional investment manager or security or any class of institutional
investment managers, or securities from any or all of the provisions
of this subsection or the rules thereunder.
5-101
(4) The Commission shall make available
to the public for a reasonable fee a list of all equity securities
of a class described in section 13(d)(1) of this title, updated no
less frequently than reports are required to be filed pursuant to
paragraph (1) of this subsection. The Commission shall tabulate the
information contained in any report filed pursuant to this subsection
in a manner which will, in the view of the Commission, maximize the
usefulness of the information to other Federal and State authorities
and the public. Promptly after the filing of any such report, the
Commission shall make the information contained therein conveniently
available to the public for a reasonable fee in such form as the Commission,
by rule, may prescribe, except that the Commission, as it determines
to be necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection
of investors, may delay or prevent public disclosure of any such information
in accordance with section 552 of title 5, United States Code. Notwithstanding
the preceding sentence, any such information identifying the securities
held by the account of a natural person or an estate or trust (other
than a business trust or investment company) shall not be disclosed
to the public.
5-102
(5) In exercising its
authority under this subsection, the Commission shall determine (and
so state) that its action is necessary or appropriate in the public
interest and for the protection of investors or to maintain fair and
orderly markets or, in granting an exemption, that its action is consistent
with the protection of investors and the purposes of this subsection.
In exercising such authority the Commission shall take such steps
as are within its power, including consulting with the Comptroller
General of the United States, the Director of the Office of Management
and Budget, the appropriate regulatory agencies, Federal and State
authorities which, directly or indirectly, require reports from institutional
investment managers of information substantially similar to that called
for by this subsection, national securities exchanges, and registered
securities associations, (A) to achieve uniform, centralized reporting
of information concerning the securities holdings of and transactions
by or for accounts with respect to which institutional investment
managers exercise investment discretion, and (B) consistently with
the objective set forth in the preceding subparagraph, to avoid unnecessarily
duplicative reporting by, and minimize the compliance burden on, institutional
investment managers. Federal authorities which, directly or indirectly,
require reports from institutional investment managers of information
substantially similar to that called for by this subsection shall
cooperate with the Commission in the performance of its responsibilities
under the preceding sentence. An institutional investment manager
which is a bank, the deposits of which are insured in accordance with
the Federal Deposit Insurance Act, shall file with the appropriate
regulatory agency a copy of every report filed with the Commission
pursuant to the subsection.
5-103
(6) (A) For
purposes of this subsection the term “institutional investment
manager” includes any person, other than a natural person, investing
in or buying and selling securities for its own account, and any person
exercising investment discretion with respect to the account of any
other person.
(B)
The Commission shall adopt such rules as it deems necessary or appropriate
to prevent duplicative reporting pursuant to this subsection by two
or more institutional investment managers exercising investment discretion
with respect to the same amount.
5-104
(g) Statement of equity security ownership.
(1) Any person who is directly
or indirectly the beneficial owner of more than 5 per centum of any
security of a class described in subsection (d)(1) of this section
or otherwise becomes or is deemed to become a beneficial owner of
any security of a class described in subsection (d)(1) upon the purchase
or sale of a security-based swap that the Commission may define by
rule shall file with the Commission a statement setting forth, in
such form and at such time as the Commission may, by rule, prescribe—
(A) such person’s identity, residence, and citizenship; and
(B) the number and
description of the shares in which such person has an interest and
the nature of such interest.
(2) If any material change occurs in the
facts set forth in the statement filed with the Commission, an amendment
shall be filed with the Commission, in accordance with such rules
and regulations as the Commission may prescribe as necessary or appropriate
in the public interest or for the protection of investors.
(3) When two or more persons
act as a partnership, limited partnership, syndicate, or other group
for the purpose of acquiring, holding, or disposing of securities
of an issuer, such syndicate or group shall be deemed a “person”
for the purposes of this subsection.
5-105
(4) In determining, for purposes of this
subsection, any percentage of a class of any security, such class
shall be deemed to consist of the amount of the outstanding securities
of such class, exclusive of any securities of such class held by or
for the account of the issuer or a subsidiary of the issuer.
(5) In exercising its authority
under this subsection, the Commission shall take such steps as it
deems necessary or appropriate in the public interest or for the protection
of investors (A) to achieve centralized reporting of information regarding
ownership, (B) to avoid unnecessarily duplicative reporting by and
minimize the compliance burden on persons required to report, and
(C) to tabulate and promptly make available the information contained
in any report filed pursuant to this subsection in a manner which
will, in the view of the Commission, maximize the usefulness of the
information to other Federal and State agencies and the public.
(6) The Commission may,
by rule or order, exempt, in whole or part, any person or class of
persons from any or all of the reporting requirements of this subsection
as it deems necessary or appropriate in the public interest
or for the protection of investors.
5-105.1
(h) Large trader reporting.
(1) For the purpose of monitoring the impact
on the securities markets of securities transactions involving a substantial
volume or a large fair market value or exercise value and for the
purpose of otherwise assisting the Commission in the enforcement of
this title, each large trader shall—
(A) provide such information
to the Commission as the Commission may by rule or regulation prescribe
as necessary or appropriate, identifying such large trader and all
accounts in or through which such large trader effects such transactions;
and
(B) identify,
in accordance with such rules or regulations as the Commission may
prescribe as necessary or appropriate, to any registered broker or
dealer by or through whom such large trader directly or indirectly
effects securities transactions, such large trader and all accounts
directly or indirectly maintained with such broker or dealer by such
large trader in or through which such transactions are effected.
5-105.2
(2) Every registered broker
or dealer shall make and keep for prescribed periods such records
as the Commission by rule or regulation prescribes as necessary or
appropriate in the public interest, for the protection of investors,
or otherwise in furtherance of the purposes of this title, with respect
to securities transactions that equal or exceed the reporting activity
level effected directly or indirectly by or through such registered
broker or dealer of or for any person that such broker or dealer knows
is a large trader, or any person that such broker or dealer has reason
to know is a large trader on the basis of transactions in securities
effected by or through such broker or dealer. Such records shall be
available for reporting to the Commission, or any self-regulatory
organization that the Commission shall designate to receive such reports,
on the morning of the day following the day the transactions were
effected, and shall be reported to the Commission or a self-regulatory
organization designated by the Commission immediately upon request
by the Commission or such a self-regulatory organization. Such records
and reports shall be in a format and transmitted in a manner prescribed
by the Commission (including, but not limited to, machine readable
form).
5-105.3
(3) The Commission may
prescribe rules or regulations governing the manner in which transactions
and accounts shall be aggregated for the purpose of this subsection,
including aggregation on the basis of common ownership or control.
(4) All records required
to be made and kept by registered brokers and dealers pursuant to
this subsection with respect to transactions effected by large traders
are subject at any time, or from time to time, to such reasonable
periodic, special or other examinations by representatives of the
Commission as the Commission deems necessary or appropriate in the
public interest, for the protection of investors, or otherwise in
furtherance of the purposes of this title.
5-105.4
(5) In exercising its authority under this
subsection, the Commission shall take into account—
(A) existing
reporting systems;
(B) the costs associated with maintaining information with respect
to transactions effected by large traders and reporting such information
to the Commission or self-regulatory organizations; and
(C) the relationship between
the United States and international securities markets.
5-105.5
(6) The Commission, by rule,
regulation, or order, consistent with the purposes of this title,
may exempt any person or class of persons or any transaction or class
of transactions, either conditionally or upon specified terms and
conditions or for stated periods, from the operation of this subsection,
and the rules and regulations thereunder.
(7) Notwithstanding any other provision
of law, the Commission shall not be compelled to disclose any information
required to be kept or reported under this subsection. Nothing in
this subsection shall authorize the Commission to withhold information
from Congress, or prevent the Commission from complying with a request
for information from any other Federal department or agency requesting
information for purposes within the scope of its jurisdiction, or
complying with an order of a court of the United States in an action
brought by the United States or the Commission. For purposes of section
552 of title 5, United States Code, this subsection shall be considered
a statute described in subsection (b)(3)(B) of such section 552.
5-105.51
(8) For purposes of this
subsection—
(A) the term “large trader”
means every person who, for his own account or an account for which
he exercises investment discretion, effects transactions for the purchase
or sale of any publicly traded security or securities by use of any
means or instrumentality of interstate commerce or of the mails, or
of any facility of a national securities exchange, directly or indirectly
by or through a registered broker or dealer in an aggregate amount
equal to or in excess of the identifying activity level;
(B) the term “publicly
traded security” means any equity security (including an option
on individual equity securities, and an option on a group or index
of such securities) listed, or admitted to unlisted trading privileges,
on a national securities exchange, or quoted in an automated interdealer
quotation system;
(C) the term “identifying activity level” means transactions
in publicly traded securities at or above a level of volume, fair
market value, or exercise value as shall be fixed from time to time
by the Commission by rule or regulation, specifying the time interval
during which such transactions shall be aggregated;
(D) the term “reporting activity
level” means transactions in publicly traded securities at or
above a level of volume, fair market value, or exercise value as shall
be fixed from time to time by the Commission by rule, regulation,
or order, specifying the time interval during which such transactions
shall be aggregated; and
(E) the term “person” has
the meaning given in section 3(a)(9) of this title and also includes
two or more persons acting as a partnership, limited partnership,
syndicate, or other group, but does not include a foreign cental bank.
5-105.6
(i) Accuracy
of financial reports. Each financial report that contains financial
statements, and that is required to be prepared in accordance with
(or reconciled to) generally accepted accounting principles under
this title and filed with the Commission shall reflect all material
correcting adjustments that have been identified by a registered public
accounting firm in accordance with generally accepted accounting principles
and the rules and regulations of the Commission.
(j) Off-balance sheet transactions. Not later than 180 days after the date of enactment of the Sarbanes-Oxley
Act of 2002, the Commission shall issue final rules providing that
each annual and quarterly financial report required to be filed with
the Commission shall disclose all material off-balance sheet transactions,
arrangements, obligations (including contingent obligations), and
other relationships of the issuer with unconsolidated entities or
other persons, that may have a material current or future effect on
financial condition, changes in financial condition, results of operations,
liquidity, capital expenditures, capital resources, or significant
components of revenues or expenses.
5-105.61
(k) Prohibition on personal loans to executives.
(1) It shall be unlawful for
any issuer (as defined in section 2 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002),
directly or indirectly, including through any subsidiary, to extend
or maintain credit, to arrange for the extension of credit, or to
renew an extension of credit, in the form of a personal loan to or
for any director or executive officer (or equivalent thereof) of that
issuer. An extension of credit maintained by the issuer on the date
of enactment of this subsection shall not be subject to the provisions
of this subsection, provided that there is no material modification
to any term of any such extension of credit or any renewal of any
such extension of credit on or after that date of enactment.
(2) Paragraph (1) does not
preclude any home improvement and manufactured home loans (as that
term is defined in section 5 of the Home Owners’ Loan Act (12
U.S.C. 1464)), consumer credit (as defined in section 103 of the Truth
in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1602)), or any extension of credit under
an open end credit plan (as defined in section 103 of the Truth in
Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1602)), or a charge card (as defined in section
127(c)(4)(E) of the Truth in Lending Act (15 U.S.C. 1637(c)(4)(E)),
or any extension of credit by a broker or dealer registered under
section 15 of this title to an employee of that broker or dealer to
buy, trade, or carry securities, that is permitted under rules or
regulations of the Board of Governors of the Federal Reserve System
pursuant to section 7 of this title (other than an extension of credit
that would be used to purchase the stock of that issuer), that is—
(A) made or provided in the ordinary course of the consumer credit
business of such issuer;
(B) of a type that is generally made
available by such issuer to the public; and
(C) made by such issuer on market terms,
or terms that are no more favorable than those offered by the issuer
to the general public for such extensions of credit.
(3) Paragraph (1) does
not apply to any loan made or maintained by an insured depository
institution (as defined in section 3 of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act (12 U.S.C. 1813)), if the loan is subject to the insider lending
restrictions of section 22(h) of the Federal Reserve Act (12 U.S.C.
375b).
5-105.62
(l) Real time issuer disclosures. Each issuer reporting under section
13(a) or 15(d) shall disclose to the public on a rapid and current
basis such additional information concerning material changes in the
financial condition or operations of the issuer, in plain English,
which may include trend and qualitative information and graphic presentations,
as the Commission determines, by rule, is necessary or useful for
the protection of investors and in the public interest.
(m) Public availability of
security-based swap transaction data.
(1) (A)
In this paragraph, the term “real-time public reporting”
means to report data relating to a security-based swap transaction,
including price and volume, as soon as technologically practicable
after the time at which the security-based swap transaction has been
executed.
(B) The purpose
of this subsection is to authorize the Commission to make security-based
swap transaction and pricing data available to the public in such
form and at such times as the Commission determines appropriate to
enhance price discovery.
(C) The Commission is authorized to
provide by rule for the public availability of security-based swap
transaction, volume, and pricing data as follows:
(i) With respect
to those security-based swaps that are subject to the mandatory clearing
requirement described in section 3C(a)(1) (including those security-based
swaps that are excepted from the requirement pursuant to section 3C(g)),
the Commission shall require real-time public reporting for such transactions.
(ii) With respect to those
security-based swaps that are not subject to the mandatory clearing
requirement described in section 3C(a)(1), but are cleared at a registered
clearing agency, the Commission shall require real-time public reporting
for such transactions.
(iii) With respect to security-based swaps that are not cleared at
a registered clearing agency and which are reported to a security-based
swap data repository or the Commission under section 3C(a)(6), the
Commission shall require real-time public reporting for such transactions,
in a manner that does not disclose the business transactions and market
positions of any person.
(iv) With respect to security-based swaps that are determined to
be required to be cleared under section 3C(b) but are not cleared,
the Commission shall require real-time public reporting for such transactions.
(D)
The Commission may require registered entities to publicly disseminate
the security-based swap transaction and pricing data required to be
reported under this paragraph.
(E) With respect to the rule providing
for the public availability of transaction and pricing data for security-based
swaps described in clauses (i) and (ii) of subparagraph (C), the rule
promulgated by the Commission shall contain provisions—
(i) to ensure such
information does not identify the participants;
(ii) to specify the criteria for determining
what constitutes a large notional security-based swap transaction
(block trade) for particular markets and contracts;
(iii) to specify the appropriate time delay
for reporting large notional security-based swap transactions (block
trades) to the public; and
(iv) that take into account whether the public disclosure will materially
reduce market liquidity.
(F) Parties to a security-based swap
(including agents of the parties to a security-based swap) shall be
responsible for reporting security-based swap transaction information
to the appropriate registered entity in a timely manner as may be
prescribed by the Commission.
(G) Each security-based swap (whether
cleared or uncleared) shall be reported to a registered security-based
swap data repository.
(H) A clearing agency may register as a security-based swap data
repository.
(2) Semiannual and annual public reporting of aggregate security-based
swap data.
(A) In accordance with subparagraph
(B), the Commission shall issue a written report on a semiannual and
annual basis to make available to the public information relating
to—
(i) the trading and clearing in the major
security-based swap categories; and
(ii) the market participants and developments
in new products.
(B) In preparing a report under subparagraph
(A), the Commission shall—
(i) use information from security-based
swap data repositories and clearing agencies; and
(ii) consult with the Office of the Comptroller
of the Currency, the Bank for International Settlements, and such other regulatory
bodies as may be necessary.
(C) The Commission may, by rule, regulation,
or order, delegate the public reporting responsibilities of the Commission
under this paragraph in accordance with such terms and conditions
as the Commission determines to be appropriate and in the public interest.
(n) Security-based swap data repositories.
(1) It shall be unlawful for any person,
unless registered with the Commission, directly or indirectly, to
make use of the mails or any means or instrumentality of interstate
commerce to perform the functions of a security-based swap data repository.
(2) Each registered security-based
swap data repository shall be subject to inspection and examination
by any representative of the Commission.
(3) (A)
To be registered, and maintain registration, as a security-based swap
data repository, the security-based swap data repository shall comply
with—
(i) the requirements and core principles described
in this subsection; and
(ii) any requirement that the Commission may impose by rule or regulation.
(B)
Unless otherwise determined by the Commission, by rule or regulation,
a security-based swap data repository described in subparagraph (A)
shall have reasonable discretion in establishing the manner in which
the security-based swap data repository complies with the core principles
described in this subsection.
(4) (A)
(i) In accordance with clause (ii), the Commission shall prescribe
standards that specify the data elements for each security-based swap
that shall be collected and maintained by each registered security-based
swap data repository.
(ii)
In carrying out clause (i), the Commission shall prescribe consistent
data element standards applicable to registered entities and reporting
counterparties.
(B) The Commission shall prescribe data
collection and data maintenance standards for security-based swap
data repositories.
(C) The standards prescribed by the Commission under this subsection
shall be comparable to the data standards imposed by the Commission
on clearing agencies in connection with their clearing of security-based
swaps.
(5) A security-based swap data repository shall—
(A) accept
data prescribed by the Commission for each security-based swap under
subsection (b);
(B) confirm with both counterparties to the security-based swap the
accuracy of the data that was submitted;
(C) maintain the data described in subparagraph
(A) in such form, in such manner, and for such period as may be required
by the Commission;
(D) (i) provide direct electronic
access to the Commission (or any designee of the Commission, including
another registered entity); and
(ii) provide the information described in
subparagraph (A) in such form and at such frequency as the Commission
may require to comply with the public reporting requirements set forth
in subsection (m);
(E) at the direction of the Commission,
establish automated systems for monitoring, screening, and analyzing
security-based swap data;
(F) maintain the privacy of any and
all security-based swap transaction information that the security-based
swap data repository receives from a security-based swap dealer, counterparty,
or any other registered entity; and
(G) on a confidential basis pursuant
to section 24, upon request, and after notifying the Commission of
the request, make available security-based swap data obtained by the
security-based swap data repository, including individual counterparty
trade and position data, to—
(i) each appropriate prudential
regulator;
(ii) the Financial
Stability Oversight Council;
(iii) the Commodity Futures Trading Commission;
(iv) the Department of Justice; and
(v) any other person that the
Commission determines to be appropriate, including—
(I) foreign financial supervisors (including
foreign futures authorities);
(II) foreign central banks;
(III) foreign ministries; and
(IV) other foreign authorities.
(H) Before the security-based swap data
repository may share information with any entity described in subparagraph
(G), the security-based swap data repository shall receive a written
agreement from each entity stating that the entity shall abide by
the confidentiality requirements described in section 24 relating
to the information on security-based swap transactions that is provided.
(6) (A) Each security-based
swap data repository shall designate an individual to serve as a chief
compliance officer.
(B) The chief compliance officer shall—
(i) report directly
to the board or to the senior officer of the security-based swap data
repository;
(ii) review
the compliance of the security-based swap data repository with respect
to the requirements and core principles described in this subsection;
(iii) in consultation with
the board of the security-based swap data repository, a body performing
a function similar to the board of the security-based swap data repository,
or the senior officer of the security-based swap data repository,
resolve any conflicts of interest that may arise;
(iv) be responsible for administering each
policy and procedure that is required to be established pursuant to
this section;
(v) ensure
compliance with this title (including regulations) relating to agreements,
contracts, or transactions, including each rule prescribed by the
Commission under this section;
(vi) establish procedures for the remediation
of noncompliance issues identified by the chief compliance officer
through any—
(I) compliance office review;
(II) look-back;
(III) internal or external audit finding;
(IV) self-reported error;
or
(V) validated complaint;
and
(vii)
establish and follow appropriate procedures for the handling, management
response, remediation, retesting, and closing of noncompliance issues.
(C) (i) In accordance with rules
prescribed by the Commission, the chief compliance officer shall annually
prepare and sign a report that contains a description of—
(I) the compliance of the security-based
swap data repository of the chief compliance officer with respect
to this title (including regulations); and
(II) each policy and procedure of the security-based
swap data repository of the chief compliance officer (including the
code of ethics and conflict of interest policies of the security-based
swap data repository).
(ii) A compliance report under
clause (i) shall—
(I) accompany each appropriate financial report of the security-based
swap data repository that is required to be furnished to the Commission
pursuant to this section; and
(II) include a certification that, under
penalty of law, the compliance report is accurate and complete.
(7) (A)
Unless necessary or appropriate to achieve the purposes of this title,
the swap data repository shall not—
(i) adopt any rule or take
any action that results in any unreasonable restraint of trade; or
(ii) impose any material
anticompetitive burden on the trading, clearing, or reporting of transactions.
(B)
Each security-based swap data repository shall establish governance
arrangements that are transparent—
(i) to fulfill public interest
requirements; and
(ii)
to support the objectives of the Federal Government, owners, and participants.
(C)
Each security-based swap data repository shall—
(i) establish
and enforce rules to minimize conflicts of interest in the decision-making
process of the security-based swap data repository; and
(ii) establish a process for
resolving any conflicts of interest described in clause (i).
(D) (i) The Commission may develop 1 or more additional duties
applicable to security-based swap data repositories.
(ii) In developing additional duties under
subparagraph (A), the Commission may take into consideration any evolving
standard of the United States or the international community.
(iii) The Commission shall establish
additional duties for any registrant described in section 13(m)(2)(C)
in order to minimize conflicts of interest, protect data, ensure compliance,
and guarantee the safety and security of the security-based swap data
repository.
(8) Any person that is required to be registered
as a security-based swap data repository under this subsection shall
register with the Commission, regardless of whether that person is
also licensed under the Commodity Exchange Act as a swap data repository.
(9) The Commission shall
adopt rules governing persons that are registered under this subsection.
(o) Beneficial
ownership. For purposes of this section and section 16, a person
shall be deemed to acquire beneficial ownership of an equity security
based on the purchase or sale of a security-based swap, only to the
extent that the Commission, by rule, determines after consultation
with the prudential regulators and the Secretary of the Treasury,
that the purchase or sale of the security-based swap, or class of
security-based swap, provides incidents of ownership comparable to
direct ownership of the equity security, and that it is necessary
to achieve the purposes of this section that the purchase or sale
of the security-based swaps, or class of security-based swap, be deemed
the acquisition of beneficial ownership of the equity security.
(p) Disclosures relating
to conflict minerals originating in the Democratic Republic of the
Congo.
(1) (A) Not later than 270
days after the date of the enactment of this subsection, the Commission
shall promulgate regulations requiring any person described in paragraph
(2) to disclose annually, beginning with the person’s first
full fiscal year that begins after the date of promulgation of such
regulations, whether conflict minerals that are necessary as described
in paragraph (2)(B), in the year for which such reporting is required,
did originate in the Democratic Republic of the Congo or an adjoining
country and, in cases in which such conflict minerals did originate
in any such country, submit to the Commission a report that includes,
with respect to the period covered by the report—
(i) a description
of the measures taken by the person to exercise due diligence on the
source and chain of custody of such minerals, which measures shall
include an independent private sector audit of such report submitted
through the Commission that is conducted in accordance with standards
established by the Comptroller General of the United States, in accordance
with rules promulgated by the Commission, in consultation with the
Secretary of State; and
(ii) a description of the products manufactured or contracted to
be manufactured that are not DRC conflict free (“DRC conflict
free” is defined to mean the products that do not contain minerals
that directly or indirectly finance or benefit armed groups in the Democratic
Republic of the Congo or an adjoining country), the entity that conducted
the independent private sector audit in accordance with clause (i),
the facilities used to process the conflict minerals, the country
of origin of the conflict minerals, and the efforts to determine the
mine or location of origin with the greatest possible specificity.
(B)
The person submitting a report under subparagraph (A) shall certify
the audit described in clause (i) of such subparagraph that is included
in such report. Such a certified audit shall constitute a critical
component of due diligence in establishing the source and chain of
custody of such minerals.
(C) If a report required to be submitted
by a person under subparagraph (A) relies on a determination of an
independent private sector audit, as described under subparagraph
(A)(i), or other due diligence processes previously determined by
the Commission to be unreliable, the report shall not satisfy the
requirements of the regulations promulgated under subparagraph (A)(i).
(D) For purposes of
this paragraph, a product may be labeled as “DRC conflict free”
if the product does not contain conflict minerals that directly or
indirectly finance or benefit armed groups in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo or an adjoining country.
(E) Each person described under paragraph
(2) shall make available to the public on the Internet website of
such person the information disclosed by such person under subparagraph
(A).
(2)
A person is described in this paragraph if—
(A) the
person is required to file reports with the Commission pursuant to
paragraph (1)(A); and
(B) conflict minerals are necessary to the functionality or production
of a product manufactured by such person.
(3) The Commission shall revise
or temporarily waive the requirements described in paragraph (1) if
the President transmits to the Commission a determination that—
(A) such revision or waiver is in the national security interest
of the United States and the President includes the reasons therefore;
and
(B) establishes
a date, not later than 2 years after the initial publication of such
exemption, on which such exemption shall expire.
(4) The requirements of
paragraph (1) shall terminate on the date on which the President determines
and certifies to the appropriate congressional committees, but in
no case earlier than the date that is one day after the end of the
5-year period beginning on the date of the enactment of this subsection,
that no armed groups continue to be directly involved and benefitting
from commercial activity involving conflict minerals.
(5) For purposes of this subsection, the
terms “adjoining country”, “appropriate congressional
committees”, “armed group”, and “conflict
mineral” have the meaning given those terms under section 1502
of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and Consumer Protection Act.
(q) Disclosure
of payments by resource extraction issuers.
(1) In this subsection—
(A) the
term “commercial development of oil, natural gas, or minerals”
includes exploration, extraction, processing, export, and other significant
actions relating to oil, natural gas, or minerals, or the acquisition
of a license for any such activity, as determined by the Commission;
(B) the term “foreign
government” means a foreign government, a department, agency,
or instrumentality of a foreign government, or a company owned by
a foreign government, as determined by the Commission;
(C) the term “payment”—
(i) means a payment that is—
(I) made to further the commercial development of oil, natural gas,
or minerals; and
(II)
not de minimis; and
(ii) includes taxes, royalties, fees (including license
fees), production entitlements, bonuses, and other material benefits,
that the Commission, consistent with the guidelines of the Extractive
Industries Transparency Initiative (to the extent practicable), determines
are part of the commonly recognized revenue stream for the commercial
development of oil, natural gas, or minerals;
(D) the term “resource
extraction issuer” means an issuer that—
(i) is required
to file an annual report with the Commission; and
(ii) engages in the commercial development
of oil, natural gas, or minerals;
(E) the term “interactive data
format” means an electronic data format in which pieces of information
are identified using an interactive data standard; and
(F) the term “interactive
data standard” means standardized list of electronic tags that
mark information included in the annual report of a resource extraction
issuer.
(2) (A) Not later than 270
days after the date of enactment of the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform
and Consumer Protection Act, the Commission shall issue final rules
that require each resource extraction issuer to include in an annual
report of the resource extraction issuer information relating to any
payment made by the resource extraction issuer, a subsidiary of the
resource extraction issuer, or an entity under the control of the
resource extraction issuer to a foreign government or the Federal
Government for the purpose of the commercial development of oil, natural
gas, or minerals, including—
(i) the type and total amount
of such payments made for each project of the resource extraction
issuer relating to the commercial development of oil, natural gas,
or minerals; and
(ii) the
type and total amount of such payments made to each government.
(B)
In issuing rules under subparagraph (A), the Commission may consult
with any agency or entity that the Commission determines is relevant.
(C) The rules issued
under subparagraph (A) shall require that the information included
in the annual report of a resource extraction issuer be submitted
in an interactive data format.
(D) (i) The rules issued
under subparagraph (A) shall establish an interactive data standard
for the information included in the annual report of a resource extraction
issuer.
(ii) The interactive
data standard shall include electronic tags that identify, for any
payments made by a resource extraction issuer to a foreign government
or the Federal Government—
(I) the total amounts of the payments, by category;
(II) the currency used to make the payments;
(III) the financial period
in which the payments were made;
(IV) the business segment of the resource
extraction issuer that made the payments;
(V) the government that received the payments,
and the country in which the government is located;
(VI) the project of the resource extraction
issuer to which the payments relate; and
(VII) such other information as the Commission
may determine is necessary or appropriate in the public interest or
for the protection of investors.
(E) To the extent practicable,
the rules issued under subparagraph (A) shall support the commitment
of the Federal Government to international transparency promotion
efforts relating to the commercial development of oil, natural gas,
or minerals.
(F)
With respect to each resource extraction issuer, the final rules issued
under subparagraph (A) shall take effect on the date on which the
resource extraction issuer is required to submit an annual report
relating to the fiscal year of the resource extraction issuer that
ends not earlier than 1 year after the date on which the Commission
issues final rules under subparagraph (A).
(3) (A)
To the extent practicable, the Commission shall make available
online, to the public, a compilation of the information required to
be submitted under the rules issued under paragraph (2)(A).
(B) Nothing in this paragraph
shall require the Commission to make available online information
other than the information required to be submitted under the rules
issued under paragraph (2)(A).
(4) There are authorized to be appropriated
to the Commission such sums as may be necessary to carry out this
subsection.
(r) Disclosure of certain activities relating to Iran.
(1) Each issuer required to file an annual
or quarterly report under subsection (a) shall disclose in that report
the information required by paragraph (2) if, during the period covered
by the report, the issuer or any affiliate of the issuer—
(A) knowingly engaged in an activity described in subsection (a)
or (b) of section 5 of the Iran Sanctions Act of 1996 (Public Law
104-172; 50 U.S.C. 1701 note);
(B) knowingly engaged in an activity
described in subsection (c)(2) of section 104 of the Comprehensive
Iran Sanctions, Accountability, and Divestment Act of 2010 (22 U.S.C.
8513) or a transaction described in subsection (d)(1) of that section;
(C) knowingly engaged
in an activity described in section 105A(b)(2) of that Act; or
(D) knowingly conducted
any transaction or dealing with—
(i) any person the property
and interests in property of which are blocked pursuant to Executive
Order No. 13224 (66 Fed. Reg. 49079; relating to blocking property
and prohibiting transactions with persons who commit, threaten to
commit, or support terrorism);
(ii) any person the property and interests
in property of which are blocked pursuant to Executive Order No. 13382
(70 Fed. Reg. 38567; relating to blocking of property of weapons of
mass destruction proliferators and their supporters); or
(iii) any person or entity identified
under section 560.304 of title 31, Code of Federal Regulations (relating
to the definition of the Government of Iran) without the specific
authorization of a Federal department or agency.
(2) If an
issuer or an affiliate of the issuer has engaged in any activity described
in paragraph (1), the issuer shall disclose a detailed description
of each such activity, including—
(A) the nature and
extent of the activity;
(B) the gross revenues and net profits,
if any, attributable to the activity; and
(C) whether the issuer or the affiliate
of the issuer (as the case may be) intends to continue the activity.
(3) If an
issuer reports under paragraph (1) that the issuer or an affiliate
of the issuer has knowingly engaged in any activity described in that
paragraph, the issuer shall separately file with the Commission, concurrently
with the annual or quarterly report under subsection (a), a notice
that the disclosure of that activity has been included in that annual
or quarterly report that identifies the issuer and contains the information
required by paragraph (2).
(4) Upon receiving a notice under paragraph (3) that an annual or
quarterly report includes a disclosure of an activity described in
paragraph (1), the Commission shall promptly—
(A) transmit
the report to—
(i) the President;
(ii) the Committee on Foreign Affairs and
the Committee on Financial Services of the House of Representatives;
and
(iii) the Committee
on Foreign Relations and the Committee on Banking, Housing, and Urban
Affairs of the Senate; and
(B) make the information provided in
the disclosure and the notice available to the public by posting the
information on the Internet website of the Commission.
(5) Upon receiving a report
under paragraph (4) that includes a disclosure of an activity described
in paragraph (1) (other than an activity described in subparagraph (D)(iii)
of that paragraph), the President shall—
(A) initiate
an investigation into the possible imposition of sanctions under the
Iran Sanctions Act of 1996 (Public Law 104-172; 50 U.S.C. 1701 note),
section 104 or 105A of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability,
and Divestment Act of 2010, an Executive order specified in clause
(i) or (ii) of paragraph (1)(D), or any other provision of law relating
to the imposition of sanctions with respect to Iran, as applicable;
and
(B) not later
than 180 days after initiating such an investigation, make a determination
with respect to whether sanctions should be imposed with respect to
the issuer or the affiliate of the issuer (as the case may be).
(6) The provisions
of this subsection shall terminate on the date that is 30 days after
the date on which the President makes the certification described
in section 401(a) of the Comprehensive Iran Sanctions, Accountability,
and Divestment Act of 2010 (22 U.S.C. 8551(a)).
(s) Data standards.
(1) The Commission shall,
by rule, adopt data standards for all collections of information with
respect to periodic and current reports required to be filed or furnished
under this section or under section 15(d), except that the Commission
may exempt exhibits, signatures, and certifications from those data
standards.
(2) The data
standards required under paragraph (1) shall incorporate, and ensure
compatibility with (to the extent feasible), all applicable data standards
established in the rules promulgated under section 124 of the Financial
Stability Act of 2010, including, to the extent practicable, by having
the characteristics described in clauses (i) through (vi) of subsection
(c)(1)(B) of such section 124.
[15 USC 78m. As amended
by acts of Aug. 20, 1964 (78 Stat. 569); July 29, 1968 (82 Stat. 454);
Dec. 22, 1970 (84 Stat. 1497); June 4, 1975 (89 Stat. 119); Dec. 19,
1977 (91 Stat. 1494, 1498, 1499); June 6, 1983 (97 Stat. 205); Dec.
4, 1987 (101 Stat. 1256); Feb 3, 1988 (101 Stat. 1810); Aug. 23, 1988
(102 Stat. 1415); Oct. 16, 1990 (104 Stat. 964); Jan. 16, 2002 (115
Stat. 2395); July 30, 2002 (116 Stat. 771, 785, 787, 791); July 21,
2010 (124 Stat. 1779, 1799, 1866, 1870, 1952, 2213, 2220); April 5,
2012 (126 Stat. 309); Aug. 10, 2012 (126 Stat. 1235); Dec. 4, 2015
(129 Stat. 1798); and Dec. 23, 2022 (136 Stat. 3426).]