

[Federal Register: January 25, 2008 (Volume 73, Number 17)]
[Rules 
and Regulations]               
[Page 4450-4459]
From the Federal Register Online via GPO Access [wais.access.gpo.gov]
[DOCID:fr25ja08-22]                         

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SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

17 CFR Part 240

[Release No. 34-57172; IC-28124; File No. S7-16-07]
RIN 3235-AJ92

 
Electronic Shareholder Forums

AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.

ACTION: Final rule.

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SUMMARY: We are adopting amendments to the proxy rules under the 
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to facilitate electronic shareholder 
forums. The amendments clarify that participation in an electronic 
shareholder forum that could potentially constitute a solicitation 
subject to the proxy rules is exempt from most of the proxy rules if 
all of the conditions to the exemption are satisfied. In addition, the 
amendments state that a shareholder, company, or third party acting on 
behalf of a shareholder or company that establishes, maintains or 
operates an electronic shareholder forum will not be liable under the 
federal securities laws for any statement or information provided by 
another person participating in the forum. Therefore, the amendments 
remove legal ambiguity that might deter shareholders and companies from 
energetically pursuing this mode of communication.

DATES: Effective Date: February 25, 2008.

FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Lillian Brown, Tamara Brightwell, or 
John Fieldsend at (202) 551-3700, in the Division of Corporation 
Finance, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission, 100 F Street, NE., 
Washington, DC 20549-3010.

SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION: We are amending Rule 14a-2,\1\ and adopting 
new Rule 14a-17,\2\ under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.\3\
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    \1\ 17 CFR 240.14a-2.
    \2\ 17 CFR 240.14a-17.
    \3\ 15 U.S.C. 78a et al.
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I. Background

    On July 27, 2007, the Commission published for comment a release 
proposing, among other things, amendments to the proxy rules relating 
to electronic shareholder forums.\4\ We

[[Page 4451]]

are adopting new Rule 14a-17\5\ and adding an exemption to Rule 14a-2 
substantially as proposed in that release.
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    \4\ Release No. 34-56160 (July 27, 2007) [72 FR 43466] 
(``Proposing Release''). The instant release addresses only the 
electronic shareholder forum aspects of the Proposing Release. 
Comments received that addressed the comprehensive package of 
amendments to the proxy rules and related disclosure requirements 
are outside the scope of this adopting release.
    \5\ New Rule 14a-17 was proposed as Rule 14a-18.
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    The purposes of new Rule 14a-17 and the Rule 14a-2 exemption are to 
facilitate experimentation, innovation, and greater use of the Internet 
to further shareholder communications. By facilitating such 
communications on the Internet among shareholders, and between 
shareholders and their companies, we hope to tap the potential of 
technology to better vindicate shareholders' state law rights, 
including their right to elect directors, in ways that are potentially 
both more effective and less expensive for shareholders and companies.
    In a series of proxy roundtables that we sponsored in May 2007, 
several participants observed that recent technological developments 
hold promise in this regard.\6\ Those participants noted that these 
technological developments could provide a more effective and efficient 
means of communication than any that are currently available to 
shareholders.\7\
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    \6\ See Rich Daly, Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc.; Amy 
Goodman, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP; Stanley Keller, Edwards Angell 
Palmer & Dodge LLP; Cary Klafter, Intel Corporation; and Paul 
Neuhauser, The University of Iowa College of Law, Transcript of 
Roundtable on the Federal Proxy Rules and State Corporation Law, May 
7, 2007, at 152 to 171. See also, Russell Read, CalPERS; Amy 
Goodman, Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP; Nell Minow, The Corporate 
Library; Bill Mostyn, Bank of America Corporation; and Gary Brouse, 
Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility, Transcript of 
Roundtable on Proxy Voting Mechanics, May 24, 2007, at 54 to 81.
    \7\ Id.
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    For example, the participants suggested that an online forum that 
would be for the exclusive use of shareholders of the company could 
protect the shareholders' privacy through encrypted unique 
identifiers,\8\ while still permitting participants to know what voting 
percentage of the company was represented in discussions.\9\ 
Participants in such a forum could, in addition, discuss a variety of 
important subjects that today are considered, if at all, only 
periodically and indirectly through the proxy process.\10\ With the use 
of electronic shareholder forums, shareholder participation and 
communication could be extended throughout the year, rather than only 
during the period leading up to companies' annual shareholder meetings. 
Shareholders might also use such a forum as a polling mechanism to 
elicit the sentiments of the company's managers or other shareholders 
on various potential actions.\11\
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    \8\ See, e.g., Stanley Keller, Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge 
LLP, Transcript of Roundtable on the Federal Proxy Rules and State 
Corporation Law, May 7, 2007, at 152; Rich Daly, Broadridge 
Financial Solutions, Inc., Transcript of Roundtable on the Federal 
Proxy Rules and State Corporation Law, May 7, 2007, at 157; and Nell 
Minow, The Corporate Library, Transcript of Roundtable on Proxy 
Voting Mechanics, May 24, 2007, at 67.
    \9\ See, e.g., Rich Daly, Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc., 
Transcript of Roundtable on the Federal Proxy Rules and State 
Corporation Law, May 7, 2007, at 157.
    \10\ See, e.g., Rich Daly, Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc., 
Transcript of Roundtable on the Federal Proxy Rules and State 
Corporation Law, May 7, 2007, at 156 and Stanley Keller, Edwards 
Angell Palmer & Dodge LLP, Transcript of Roundtable on the Federal 
Proxy Rules and State Corporation Law, May 7, 2007, at 160.
    \11\ See, e.g., Stanley Keller, Edwards Angell Palmer & Dodge 
LLP and Rich Daly, Transcript of Roundtable on the Federal Proxy 
Rules and State Corporation Law, May 7, 2007, at 170 to 171 and Nell 
Minow, The Corporate Library, Transcript of Roundtable on Proxy 
Voting Mechanics, May 24, 2007, at 54 to 56.
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    Technology now makes it feasible to establish such electronic 
shareholder forums to perform these functions. As one commenter 
indicated, technology is available to establish ``secure, shareowner-
to-shareowner communications, with access restricted to eligible 
shareowners, and using the Internet as a medium for efficient, ongoing 
interaction between shareowners and issuers.''\12\ These forums can be 
created so that operators and participants may exchange information 
electronically. Additionally, electronic shareholder forums can be 
designed to identify a participant's share ownership, as of a 
particular date, without disclosing that participant's name, address, 
or other identifying information.\13\ Therefore, we think that 
participants' privacy can be protected while simultaneously providing 
for accountability for anyone making false or misleading statements.
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    \12\ Comment letter from Broadridge Financial Solutions, Inc.
    \13\ Id.
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    If companies choose to participate in, or sponsor, electronic 
forums, they might find them of use in better gauging shareholder 
interest with respect to a variety of topics. A company-sponsored forum 
also could be used to provide a means for management to communicate 
with shareholders by posting press releases, notifying shareholders of 
record dates, and expressing the views of the company's management and 
board of directors.\14\
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    \14\ Of course, anyone posting information on an electronic 
shareholder forum should consider the requirements of Regulation FD. 
See 17 CFR 243.100 to 243.103.
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    Despite these potential benefits of electronic shareholder forums, 
shareholders and companies alike have been reluctant to establish, 
maintain, or operate them due, in part, to uncertainty over liability 
for statements and information provided by those participating in the 
forum. In addition, potential forum participants have expressed concern 
regarding whether views and statements expressed through the forum 
would be considered proxy solicitations. Therefore, we proposed a new 
exemption from the proxy rules (other than from the shareholder list 
provisions in Rule 14a-7 and the antifraud provisions in Rule 14a-9) 
for any solicitation in an electronic shareholder forum that satisfies 
the conditions of the exemption. We also proposed new Rule 14a-17 to 
provide liability protection for a shareholder, company, or third party 
acting on behalf of a shareholder or company that establishes, 
maintains or operates an electronic shareholder forum regarding 
statements or information provided by another party participating in 
the forum.
    As we discuss further in Section III, we are adopting new Rule 14a-
17 and the amendments to Rule 14a-2 substantially as proposed. We are 
taking these steps to remove both real and perceived impediments to 
continued private sector experimentation with, and use of the Internet 
for, communication among shareholders, and between shareholders and the 
companies in which they invest. We intend for the amendments to 
facilitate communication and thereby encourage the creation of, and 
participation in, electronic shareholder forums.

II. Comments on the Proposed Amendments To Facilitate Electronic 
Shareholder Forums

    The majority of the public comment on the proposed amendments to 
facilitate electronic shareholder forums was favorable.\15\ A 
substantial percentage of commenters remarking on the amendments, 
however, opposed substituting electronic shareholder forums for the 
current means of presenting non-binding shareholder proposals in the 
company's proxy statement pursuant to Rule 14a-8.\16\ Although we 
solicited comment on this question, we did not propose any revisions to 
Rule 14a-8 that would cause the electronic shareholder forum to be a 
substitute for the Rule 14a-8 process. In the rule amendments that we 
are adopting today, we are making the electronic shareholder forum 
option an additional, rather than substitute, means

[[Page 4452]]

of communication that could enhance and expand opportunities for 
participation and interaction.
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    \15\ See, e.g., comment letters from The Allstate Corporation 
(``Allstate''); Business Roundtable (``BRT''); Capital Research and 
Management Company (``Capital Research''); GreenMachines.net 
(``GreenMachines''); and Investment Company Institute (``ICI'').
    \16\ 17 CFR 240.14a-8.
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    In our proposing release, we requested comment on five basic issues 
related to electronic shareholder forums. The first issue was whether 
the proposed amendments would have their intended effect of providing 
sufficient flexibility under the federal securities laws to establish 
forums that permit interaction among shareholders and between 
shareholders and the company. In this regard, we solicited comment on 
whether shareholders and companies desire such flexibility, and if they 
do, whether the amended rules would provide it. We also solicited 
comment on whether any additional measures are necessary to ensure that 
the federal securities laws do not hinder development of these forums. 
Finally, we asked whether the rules should provide more direction and 
guidance relating to the structure and purpose of the forums than we 
proposed.
    The second issue on which we solicited comment concerned the 
potential liability under the federal securities laws associated with 
electronic shareholder forums. A primary purpose of the proposed 
amendments was to clarify that establishing, maintaining, or operating 
an electronic shareholder forum does not make one liable for statements 
or information provided by another person. We also asked commenters to 
identify any additional liability issues under the federal securities 
laws that we may not have addressed through the proposed amendments.
    The third issue concerned the period of time during which 
electronic shareholder forums should be allowed to operate without 
being subject to most of the federal proxy rules. Under the proposed 
amendments, any solicitation in an electronic shareholder forum by or 
on behalf of a person that does not seek, directly or indirectly, the 
power to act as a proxy for a shareholder would be exempt from most of 
the proxy rules.
    We proposed that such a person could avail himself or herself of 
the exemption provided that the solicitation was made more than 60 days 
before the date announced by the company for its next annual or special 
meeting, or not more than two days following the announcement of such a 
meeting if the announcement occurred fewer than 60 days before the 
meeting date. We solicited comment on whether an electronic shareholder 
forum could function effectively with this timing limitation. We also 
asked whether better alternatives exist to encourage free and open 
communication. Additionally, we solicited comment on whether we should 
require electronic shareholder forums to be closed down within 60 days 
of a scheduled shareholder meeting, whether shareholders whose 
communications remain posted inside the 60-day period should be 
required to file them with us, and how to best monitor these forums.
    Fourth, we solicited comment regarding the use of electronic 
shareholder forums as a substitute for advancing referenda that 
otherwise would be presented in the form of non-binding shareholder 
proposals for inclusion in a company's proxy materials.
    Finally, we solicited comment on the ways that an electronic 
shareholder forum might be used in connection with bylaw proposals 
regarding procedures for nominating candidates to the board of 
directors. In particular, we solicited comment on whether shareholders 
should be able to use an electronic shareholder forum to solicit other 
shareholders to join with them in submitting a bylaw proposal.
    The vast majority of commenters supported the new exemption for 
electronic shareholder forums that we proposed to add to Rule 14a-2 and 
proposed new Rule 14a-17.\17\ The commenters generally favored the 
continued development of electronic shareholder forums as a means of 
facilitating communication among shareholders and between shareholders 
and companies.\18\
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    \17\ See, e.g., comment letters from Allstate; BRT; Capital 
Research; GreenMachines; and ICI.
    \18\ See, e.g., comment letters from Calvert Group, Ltd. 
(``Calvert''); Senator Carl Levin (``Senator Levin''); and Stephen 
R. Van Withrop (``Van Winthrop'').
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    Despite the generally favorable reaction, some commenters predicted 
that electronic shareholder forums might develop into the same types of 
shareholder chat rooms that exist today.\19\ Other commenters suggested 
that the issues related to electronic shareholder forums require more 
time to be fully analyzed and should be addressed only upon completion 
of a comprehensive study reviewing the shareholder communications 
process.\20\ Finally, some commenters asserted that we did not 
adequately address whether the proposed 60-day, non-solicitation period 
prior to a proxy vote would provide sufficient protection against a 
coordinated proxy campaign waged on an electronic shareholder 
forum.\21\
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    \19\ See, e.g., comment letters from Bricklayers and Trowel 
Trades International Pension Fund (``Bricklayers''); Green Century 
Capital Management (``Green Century''); Social Investment Forum 
(``SIF''), and Walden Asset Management (``Walden'').
    \20\ See comment letters from American Bar Association (``ABA'') 
and Society of Corporate Secretaries and Governance Professionals 
(``SCSGP'').
    \21\ See comment letters from ABA and SunTrust Banks, Inc. 
(``SunTrust'').
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    Most of the commenters expressing concerns regarding non-binding 
shareholder proposals stated that they would oppose making the 
electronic shareholder forum a substitute for the current process under 
Rule 14a-8. Several of these commenters made it clear that they support 
electronic shareholder forums, provided that they are only a supplement 
to the current Rule 14a-8 process.\22\
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    \22\ See, e.g., comment letters from Christus Health 
(``Christus''); Domini Social Investments (``Domini''); and Trillium 
Asset Management (``Trillium'').
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    Additionally, some commenters mentioned that keeping the identity 
of participants who post messages on these electronic forums private 
would threaten meaningful communications among shareholders and with 
the company.\23\ These commenters asserted that participants' 
identities should be disclosed and that the participants' ownership 
interests in the company should be made known as well.
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    \23\ See comment letters from ABA and Christian Brothers 
Investment Services, Inc. (``Christian Brothers'').
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III. Final Rules To Facilitate Electronic Shareholder Forums

    As stated above, the amendments that we are adopting in this 
release provide an additional means for shareholders to communicate, 
and do not in any manner restrict a shareholder's ability under Rule 
14a-8 to submit a non-binding proposal to a company for inclusion in 
the company's proxy materials. Furthermore, the amendments neither 
mandate nor preclude private communications in electronic shareholder 
forums; instead, they allow for flexibility in different approaches and 
to allow innovation and experimentation.\24\
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    \24\ Because the antifraud provisions of Rule 14a-9 would apply 
to any postings, it could conceivably be necessary for a participant 
to identify itself in an otherwise anonymous forum if failure to do 
so in the circumstances would result in the omission of a ``material 
fact necessary in order to make the statements therein not false or 
misleading.'' 17 CFR 240.14a-9.
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    The amendments are designed to facilitate greater online 
interaction among shareholders by removing two major obstacles to the 
use of electronic shareholder forums.\25\ The first major obstacle to 
the use of electronic shareholder forums is the concern that a 
statement made by a participant in an

[[Page 4453]]

electronic shareholder forum will be construed as a solicitation under 
the proxy rules. Section 14(a) of the Exchange Act\26\ requires that 
the solicitation of proxy voting authority be conducted in a fair, 
honest, and informed manner.\27\ Any solicitation of proxies in 
connection with securities registered pursuant to Section 12 of the 
Exchange Act\28\ is subject to the filing and disclosure requirements 
of the Commission's proxy rules.\29\ In this regard, the Commission has 
broad authority to control the conditions under which proxies may be 
solicited so that it promotes ``fair corporate suffrage.'' \30\ A 
necessary element of this authority is to prevent solicitors from 
obtaining authorization for corporate action by means of ``deceptive or 
inadequate disclosure in proxy solicitations.'' \31\
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    \25\ 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b)(6) and 17 CFR 240.14a-17.
    \26\ 15 U.S.C. 78n(a).
    \27\ Release No. 34-31326 (October 16, 1992) [57 FR 48276 and 
48277].
    \28\ 15 U.S.C. 78l.
    \29\ See 15 U.S.C. 78n(a) and 17 CFR 240.14a-1 and 240.14a-
2(b)(1).
    \30\ 17 H.R. Rep. No. 1383, 73d Cong., 2d Sess. 13 (1934) at 14. 
The House Report indicated that the Commission was provided with 
this broad power ``with a view to preventing the recurrence of 
abuses which...[had] frustrated the free exercise of the voting 
rights of stockholders.'' Id.
    \31\ J.I. Case v. Borak, 377 U.S. 426, 431 (1964).
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    As defined by the Commission, the term ``solicitation'' encompasses 
not only a request that a shareholder execute a proxy, but also the 
``furnishing of a form of proxy or other communication to security 
holders under circumstances reasonably calculated to result in the 
procurement, withholding or revocation of a proxy.'' \32\ As such, the 
proxy rules apply to any person seeking to influence the voting of 
proxies, regardless of whether the person is seeking authorization to 
act as a proxy. Both the courts and the Commission have construed this 
necessarily fact-intensive test broadly to bring within the ambit of 
the proxy rules any communication that, under the totality of relevant 
circumstances, is considered ``part of a continuous plan ending in a 
solicitation and which prepare(s) the way for its success.'' \33\
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    \32\ 17 CFR 240.14a-1(l). Pursuant to Rule 14a-1(1)(2), the term 
``solicitation'' does not include the furnishing of a form of proxy 
to a shareholder upon the latter's unsolicited request, the issuer's 
performance of acts mandated by 17 CFR 240.14a-7, the shareholder 
list requirement, or ministerial acts performed by any person on 
behalf of the soliciting party.
    \33\ Release No. 34-29315 (June 17, 1991) [56 FR 28987 and 
28989]. See, e.g., Long Island Lighting Company v. Barbash, et al., 
779 F. 2d 793 (2d Cir. 1985).
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    Therefore, we are adding a new exemption to Rule 14a-2 to state 
explicitly that Rules 14a-3 through 14a-6 (other than Rule 14a-6(g)), 
Rule 14a-8, and Rules 14a-10 through 14a-15 do not apply to any 
solicitation in an electronic shareholder forum if all of the 
conditions to the exemption are satisfied.\34\ Rule 14a-2(b)(6) exempts 
from most of the proxy rules any solicitation by or on behalf of any 
person who does not seek directly or indirectly, either on its own or 
another's behalf, the power to act as proxy for a shareholder and does 
not furnish or otherwise request, or act on behalf of a person who 
furnishes or requests, a form of revocation, abstention, consent, or 
authorization in an electronic shareholder forum that is established, 
maintained or operated by a company, shareholder, or a third party 
acting on a company's or shareholder's behalf.\35 \
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    \34\ Id.
    \35\ See Exchange Act Rule 14a-2(b)(6).
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    A solicitation on an electronic shareholder forum will be exempt so 
long as it occurs more than 60 days prior to the date announced by the 
company for its annual or special meeting of shareholders. If the 
company announces the meeting less than 60 days before the meeting 
date, the solicitation may not occur more than two days following the 
company's announcement.\36\ We are adopting the limitations to the 
exemption because, although an electronic shareholder forum should 
provide a medium for, among other things, open discussion, debate, and 
the conduct of referenda, the actual solicitation of proxy authority 
for an upcoming meeting should be conducted in full compliance with the 
proxy rules. Any proxies obtained prior to the application of our proxy 
rules will not benefit from the full and fair disclosure required under 
the regulations.
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    \36\ The proposal would not affect the application of any other 
exemptions under Regulation 14A. For example, a person could rely on 
the other applicable exemptions in Exchange Act Rule 14a-2 (17 CFR 
240.14a-2).
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    A person who participates in an electronic shareholder forum and 
makes solicitations in reliance on the Rule 14a-2(b)(6) exemption will 
be eligible to solicit proxies after the date that the exemption is no 
longer available, or is no longer being relied upon, provided that any 
such solicitation complies with Regulation 14A. In fact, it is for this 
reason that Rule 14a-2(b)(6) is necessary. Existing Rule 14a-
2(b)(1)\37\ provides that most of the proxy rules do not apply to 
``[a]ny solicitation by or on behalf of any person who does not, at any 
time during such solicitation, seek directly or indirectly, either on 
its own or another's behalf, the power to act as proxy for a security 
holder and does not furnish or otherwise request, or act on behalf of a 
person who furnishes or requests, a form of revocation, abstention, 
consent or authorization.''
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    \37\ 17 CFR 240.14a-2(b)(1).
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    Therefore, statements on an electronic shareholder forum could be 
exempt under Rule 14a-2(b)(1), even if these amendments were not 
adopted. Once an exempt solicitation is made under Rule 14a-2(b)(1), 
however, the individual making the solicitation cannot later request 
proxy authority. Consequently, Rule 14a-2(b)(6) states that a person 
who participates in an electronic shareholder forum and makes a 
solicitation in reliance on this rule can later solicit proxies without 
threatening the exemption's validity.
    We believe that exempting participation in an electronic 
shareholder forum only up until 60 days before an annual or special 
meeting will limit the potential for abuse, and therefore we are 
adopting the 60-day limitation.\38\ Communications within an electronic 
shareholder forum that occur less than 60 days prior to the annual or 
special meeting, or more than two days after the announcement of the 
meeting if the announcement is made less than 60 days prior to the 
meeting date, will continue to be treated as they were under the proxy 
rules prior to these amendments. We recognize the concern that, as one 
commenter noted, 60 days may not be ``sufficient practical protection 
against the ability of a coordinated campaign to so color shareholder 
perceptions as to make the vote a likely, if not foregone, 
conclusion.'' \39\
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    \38\ Sixty days corresponds with the maximum amount of time 
prior to a scheduled meeting that the company may fix the record 
date for determining the stockholders entitled to notice of, or to 
vote at, a meeting under the Delaware Code. See Del. Code title 8, 
Sec.  213 (2007).
    \39\ See comment letter from ABA.
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    We believe that the 60 day cut-off period will provide sufficient 
time for shareholders to consider the information disclosed to them 
about a planned shareholder meeting. We also believe that removing 
obstacles to shareholder participation in electronic forums outweighs 
the potential for such communications to impact a shareholder's vote. 
Of course, persons relying on Rule 14a-2(b)(6) who later solicit proxy 
authority will need to comply with other Commission rules as 
applicable.
    Additionally, although commenters did not request specifically that 
we provide guidance on the potential proxy rule implications of stored 
communications available on a forum

[[Page 4454]]

after the 60-day period, one commenter referenced this subject.\40\ In 
this regard, shareholders who post communications on forums in reliance 
on Rule 14a-2(b)(6) and later solicit the power to act as a proxy for a 
shareholder will need to determine whether the earlier postings must be 
filed as soliciting materials. For instance, it is possible that 
earlier postings remaining available to shareholders could be 
``reasonably calculated to result in the procurement, withholding or 
revocation of a proxy.'' \41\ Therefore, any communications made, or 
that remain available, on the forum after the 60-day period must comply 
with the proxy rules if they constitute a solicitation, unless they 
fall within an existing exemption. One way that a forum might deal with 
this question is to give participants the opportunity to delete their 
postings as of the 60-day cut-off, or have the forum ``go dark'' during 
this period.\42\
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    \40\ See comment letter from SunTrust.
    \41\ 17 CFR 240.14a-1(l)(1)(iii).
    \42\ Of course, if a person begins soliciting proxies earlier 
than the 60-day cut-off period, that person would no longer have the 
benefits of the exemption and would therefore need to comply with 
the proxy rules, including perhaps by filing any available postings 
as soliciting materials or removing prior postings from the forum.
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    The second major obstacle to the use of electronic shareholder 
forums is the concern that one who establishes, maintains, or operates 
the forum will be liable under the federal securities laws for 
statements made by forum participants. With respect to the 
establishment of such forums, which can be conducted and maintained in 
any number of ways, new Rule 14a-17 clarifies that a shareholder or 
company (or third party acting on behalf of a shareholder or company) 
that establishes, maintains, or operates an electronic shareholder 
forum is not liable for statements made by another person participating 
in the forum.\43\
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    \43\ 17 CFR 240.14a-17(b).
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    The persons providing information to or making statements on an 
electronic shareholder forum, however, will remain liable for the 
content of those communications under traditional liability theories in 
the federal securities laws, such as those in Section 17(a) of the 
Securities Act and Section 10(b), Rule 10b-5, Rule 14a-9, and Section 
20(e) of the Exchange Act. The prohibitions in the antifraud provisions 
against primary or secondary participation in fraud, deception, or 
manipulation will continue to apply to those supplying information to 
the site, and claims will not face any additional obstacles because of 
the new rule. Also, any other applicable federal or state law will 
continue to apply to persons providing information or statements to an 
electronic shareholder forum.
    As adopted, new Rule 14a-17 provides liability protection for all 
shareholders, companies, and third parties acting on behalf of a 
shareholder or company that establish, maintain, or operate an 
electronic shareholder forum under the federal securities laws, 
provided that the forum is conducted in compliance with the federal 
securities laws, applicable state law and the company's charter and 
bylaws. The proposed rule would have applied only to companies and 
shareholders, but we believe it is appropriate to expand liability 
protections to other types of forum sponsors or operators, such as 
Internet service providers and shareholder or corporate associations, 
acting at the request, and on the behalf, of a shareholder or company.
    As noted above, liability under the federal securities laws for 
statements made on an electronic shareholder forum is one area of 
concern for shareholders, companies, or third parties acting on behalf 
of a shareholder or company when making the decision about whether to 
establish such a forum. The main purpose of Rule 14a-17 is to protect 
the person establishing, maintaining, or operating an electronic 
shareholder forum from liability under the federal securities laws in 
much the same way that the federal telecommunications laws protect an 
interactive computer service.\44\
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    \44\ See Section 230(c)(1) of the Telecommunications Act of 1996 
(47 U.S.C. 230(c)(1)) (``No provider or user of an interactive 
computer service shall be treated as the publisher or speaker of any 
information provided by another information content provider.''). 
The protection against liability in Section 230(c)(1) would 
presumably also apply to providers and users of electronic 
shareholder forums.
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    Commenters suggested certain other changes to the proposed rules. 
For instance, one commenter questioned whether statements made in 
reliance on Rule 14a-2(b)(6) are in fact solicitations as defined in 
Rule 14a-1(l),\45\ and why the antifraud provisions of Rule 14a-9 and 
the filing requirements of Rule 14a-6 did not apply to such 
statements.\46\ We believe that statements posted on an electronic 
shareholder forum may constitute a solicitation as defined in Rule 14a-
1(l) and that is why we are adopting Rule 14a-2(b)(6) as an exemption 
from most of the proxy rules for such postings and specifically 
designating which proxy rules would apply to the postings.
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    \45\ 17 CFR 240.14a-1(l).
    \46\ See comment letter from SunTrust.
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    We also considered whether certain persons who rely on the new Rule 
14a-2(b)(6) exemption should be required to file a notification with 
the Commission. We concluded that filing such a notification would be 
unnecessary because the postings made in reliance on new Rule 14a-
2(b)(6) will be limited to postings made in a shareholder forum by 
persons who are not seeking, directly or indirectly, the power to act 
as a proxy for a shareholder and to those made more than 60 days before 
any meeting of shareholders.
    Further, one commenter highlighted the need for persons who may 
rely on the exemption in Rule 14a-2(b)(6) to give consideration to the 
impact of the postings under other Commission rules and regulations. In 
particular, the commenter cited the potential implications of 
electronic shareholder forum postings on Regulation 13D beneficial 
ownership reporting.\47\ Again, we agree that any person relying on 
Rule 14a-2(b)(6) would need to assess whether compliance with other 
Commission rules and regulations is required. For instance, 
communications among shareholders in an electronic shareholder forum 
for the purpose of acquiring, holding, voting, or disposing of the 
equity securities of a company might result in the formation of a group 
for purposes of Regulation 13D.\48\ Also, soliciting activities may 
impact the eligibility to file a Schedule 13G.\49\
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    \47\ See comment letter from ABA.
    \48\ 17 CFR 240.13d-5.
    \49\ See Release No. 34-39538 (January 12, 1998) [63 FR 2854], 
Section G (Shareholder Communications and Beneficial Ownership 
Reporting).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In conclusion, we intend to remove legal ambiguity that might 
inhibit shareholders, companies, or third parties acting on behalf of a 
shareholder or company from the energetic pursuit of this mode of 
communication. We also intend that the amendments will encourage 
shareholders, companies, or third parties acting on behalf of a 
shareholder or company to take advantage of electronic shareholder 
forums to facilitate better communication among shareholders and 
between shareholders and companies.

IV. Paperwork Reduction Act

    The proxy rules constitute a ``collection of information'' 
requirement within the meaning of the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, 
the PRA.\50\ The amendments described in this release relate to a 
previously approved collection of information, ``Proxy Statements--
Regulation 14A

[[Page 4455]]

(Commission Rules 14a-1 through 14a-16 and Schedule 14A (OMB Control 
No. 3235-0059).'' Regulation 14A was adopted pursuant to the Exchange 
Act and sets forth the disclosure requirements for proxy statements 
filed by companies to help shareholders make informed voting decisions. 
We do not believe that the amendments to Rule 14a-2, or the creation of 
new Rule 14a-17, require any revision to our current burden estimates 
for Regulations 14A or impose any new recordkeeping or information 
collection requirements under the PRA that require approval of the 
Office of Management and Budget, the OMB.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \50\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

V. Cost-Benefit Analysis

    We are adopting amendments to the proxy rules under the Exchange 
Act to facilitate electronic shareholder forums by removing legal 
ambiguity under the federal securities laws that might deter 
shareholders, companies, or third parties acting on a shareholder's or 
company's behalf from establishing or contributing to such forums. 
These amendments clarify that participation in an electronic 
shareholder forum which potentially could constitute a proxy 
solicitation subject to the proxy rules, is exempt from most of the 
proxy rules if the conditions to the exemption are satisfied. In 
addition, these amendments state that a shareholder, company, or third 
party acting on a shareholder's or company's behalf that establishes, 
maintains, or operates an electronic shareholder forum generally will 
not be liable under the federal securities laws for any statement or 
information provided by another person participating in the forum.

A. Benefits

    The most important benefit of the amendments that we are adopting 
is that they will eliminate a regulatory obstacle to electronic 
shareholder forums which hold the potential to significantly improve 
communications among shareholders and between shareholders and the 
companies they own. As a result of the amendments, shareholders and 
companies may be more willing to create or sponsor these forums, 
because the regulatory and liability regime will be more clearly 
defined.
    Among the potential benefits to shareholders and companies are 
cheaper, more timely, and more relevant exchanges of information among 
shareholders and between shareholders and companies. Electronic 
shareholder forums could generate attention for sound proposals that 
could increase the value of share ownership, and they could filter out 
proposals not supported by other shareholders. They could also help 
disparate shareholders form stronger coalitions and coordinate their 
voices.\51\ These forums can also better educate or otherwise inform 
shareholders with respect to the issues that will likely come up 
through proxy solicitations during the 60 days prior to an annual 
meeting.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \51\ Of course, communications among shareholders in an 
electronic shareholder forum for the purpose of acquiring, holding, 
voting, or disposing of the equity securities of a company might 
result in the formation of a group for purposes of Regulation 13D. 
17 CFR 240.13d-5. Also, soliciting activities may impact the 
eligibility to a file a Schedule 13G. See Release No. 34-39538 
(January 12, 1998) [63 FR 2854], Section G (Shareholder 
Communications and Beneficial Ownership Reporting).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In this regard, the majority of the amendments' benefits flow from 
the potential reduction in costs of collective action among 
shareholders and the potential reduction of costs in communications 
between shareholders and companies if there is more extensive use of 
electronic forums. For example, a shareholder who does not agree with a 
corporate policy and therefore is considering taking steps to have the 
company change that policy may not be able to easily and inexpensively 
survey other shareholders and determine their sentiments regarding the 
policy. Therefore, that shareholder presently has to decide whether to 
take the costly steps of opposing the company's action by submitting a 
non-binding proposal or running a proxy contest without having the 
benefit of knowing whether the initiative is favored or will be 
supported by other shareholders.
    Electronic shareholder forums may reduce communication and 
coordination costs among shareholders and also reduce companies' costs 
in replying if they choose to do so. A shareholder seeking to submit a 
non-binding proposal or conduct a proxy contest may be encouraged or 
discouraged from doing so in accordance with the better information 
that he or she will have acquired, at little or no cost, about the 
preference of other shareholders. And if a proposal is enthusiastically 
supported by a significant number of shares, the company might take 
notice and voluntarily adopt it; again, saving the shareholder 
considerable expense and benefiting the company and its shareholders 
overall.
    Even if the company does not voluntarily adopt an initiative that 
reflects strong shareholder sentiment, knowledge of this fact by other 
shareholders will make it more likely that the initiative will be 
submitted and adopted. Shareholders may be encouraged to run successful 
proxy contests to pursue such changes, or management may be more 
responsive to the concerns in other ways. Thus, shareholders may 
benefit from a closer alignment between management and the interests of 
shareholders.
    Another way that shareholders and companies may benefit from the 
amendments is that they could have more information to use in 
evaluating initiatives submitted for their consideration by other 
shareholders or by management. This information could be available at 
little or no incremental cost and could be readily accessible and 
searchable because it is in electronic form. Therefore, the amendments 
may reduce the cost of monitoring issues among shareholders.
    Finally, more extensive use of electronic shareholder forums may be 
a step towards improving the informational efficiency of the market 
generally.

B. Costs

    There are several potential costs to shareholders of implementing 
the amendments to the proxy rules, although all such costs would be 
voluntarily undertaken. One immediate cost of an electronic shareholder 
forum is that of maintaining and operating it. Although empirical data 
are not available for the exact costs of operating electronic 
shareholder forums, based on comparable costs of maintaining 
interactive Web sites, the costs of starting and maintaining a basic 
shareholder forum are not expected to be high. As more complicated 
features are included in a forum by its operators, such as eligibility 
verification procedures, anonymous accountability programs, and share 
ownership displays, costs could be expected to increase accordingly. 
Again, however, the decision to establish, operate, or maintain an 
electronic shareholder forum, and to add more expensive features, is 
voluntary.
    Additionally, to the extent that the amendments to the proxy rules 
we are adopting result in an increase in the number of electronic 
forums, there could be increased costs related to the additional time 
that a shareholder or company chooses to spend monitoring, processing, 
and considering information that is posted on the forums. These costs 
will generally correspond to the number of shareholders using the 
forums, the frequency with which those shareholders post information on 
the forums, and the level of attention that shareholders or companies 
choose to

[[Page 4456]]

pay to the ideas and opinions of the shareholders.
    Should a company choose to sponsor or use an electronic shareholder 
forum, the company, and derivatively its shareholders, would bear the 
associated costs. If the company or its shareholders used the forum to 
conduct shareholder polls or surveys, the costs of the forums would be 
commensurately higher due to the time and effort necessary to 
accurately determine the results.
    Moreover, because electronic shareholder forums may generally 
reduce the cost of communication among shareholders and between 
shareholders and companies, they may increase the frequency of that 
communication and thus, incidentally, the subset of that communication 
that constitutes misstatements, whether made intentionally or 
unintentionally. This could increase the costs of the forums to 
companies or shareholders. Although shareholders are held liable under 
the federal securities laws for fraudulent statements made on the 
forums, at least one commenter still expressed a concern that 
fraudulent information may lead to problems for a company, such as 
changes in stock prices,\52\ which could increase costs to 
shareholders.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \52\ See, e.g., comment letter from Domini.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    It should be noted, however, that the opportunity for online 
fraudulent misstatements is not new, as a number of shareholder forums 
exist online already, and there is nothing in the nature of electronic 
shareholder forums that should attract misstatements in greater numbers 
than other more public areas of the Internet. Regardless, it is 
possible that misstatements on an electronic shareholder forum could be 
taken more seriously in cases where the forum is restricted, for 
example, to only shareholders and the company. Even so, given the 
inevitability of occasional miscommunication, an electronic forum in 
which both the shareholders and the company participate may provide a 
means to quickly dispel any misleading information.
    Another potential cost is that shareholders may have less complete 
information with which to evaluate proposals than they would have 
otherwise because the amendment facilitates solicitation, outside the 
60-day period prior to an annual or special meeting, without mandating 
extensive disclosure about the identity and the ownership of the 
participants that would occur otherwise. Because disclosures of this 
type may in some instances provide other shareholders with valuable 
information regarding possible motivations behind proposals that they 
would not otherwise receive, shareholders currently benefit from the 
proxy rules mandating such disclosure. Under the current rulemaking, 
some solicitations that would ordinarily be accompanied by these 
additional disclosures would proceed without them. The magnitude of 
this cost of lost information, however, depends on the extent to which 
shareholders have easy access to substitute sources of information and 
to the extent the information is material to the actions of 
shareholders and companies in the proxy voting process.
    Finally, a shareholder that cannot, or chooses not to, use the 
Internet may be disadvantaged by not being able to fully participate in 
this form of dialogue among shareholders and between shareholders and 
the company. As a result, these shareholders may incur costs associated 
with adjusting to the use of electronic forums or in searching for the 
information being conveyed on the electronic forums in another medium. 
Alternatively, a shareholder who has never used the Internet but feels 
compelled to do so because of an electronic shareholder forum would 
incur the costs of obtaining Internet access. These costs, however, are 
similar to those that shareholders already must incur in to participate 
in existing electronic forums. Nonetheless, it is possible that if 
electronic shareholder forums are restricted to shareholders and 
companies, they will be considered more relevant and meaningful than 
existing forums that are available to any person. The costs to 
shareholders not willing or able to use electronic shareholder forums 
could be offset to some degree by the fact that other shareholders with 
whom they share a common financial interest may take advantage of the 
forums to propose initiatives and make their sentiments known to the 
company.\53\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \53\ Also, a forum operator, or a forum participant, could 
choose to mail notice of important developments on the electronic 
shareholder forum to shareholders who are not willing or able to use 
the technology.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

VI. Consideration of Burden on Competition and Promotion of Efficiency, 
Competition, and Capital Formation

    Section 23(a)(2) of the Exchange Act \54\ requires us, when 
adopting rules under the Exchange Act, to consider the impact that any 
new rule would have on competition. In addition, Section 23(a)(2) 
prohibits us from adopting any rule that would impose a burden on 
competition not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the purposes 
of the Exchange Act. Section 3(f) of the Exchange Act \55\ and Section 
2(c) of the Investment Company Act of 1940 \56\ requires us, whenever 
we engage in rulemaking and are required to consider or determine if an 
action is necessary or appropriate in the public interest, also to 
consider whether the action will promote efficiency, competition, and 
capital formation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \54\ 15 U.S.C. 78w(a)(2).
    \55\ 15 U.S.C. 78c(f).
    \56\ 15 U.S.C. 80a-2(c).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    By removing legal ambiguity, we anticipate the rules will promote 
efficiency in shareholder communications. Electronic shareholder forums 
may reduce communication costs and coordination costs among 
shareholders and also reduce companies' costs in replying if they 
choose to do so. Finally, more extensive use of electronic shareholder 
forums may be a step towards improving the informational efficiency of 
the market generally.
    To the extent shareholders express interest in starting or 
participating in forums, competition among service providers to host or 
operate the forums may increase. We do not anticipate any effect on 
capital formation.

VII. Final Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis

    This Final Regulatory Flexibility Act Analysis, the FRFA, has been 
prepared in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act.\57\ This 
FRFA relates to new Rule 14a-17 and the new Rule 14a-2 exemption, which 
will facilitate greater online interaction among shareholders and their 
companies by removing some obstacles to the use of electronic 
shareholder forums. These amendments to the proxy rules clarify that a 
shareholder, company, or third party acting on a shareholder's or 
company's behalf that establishes, maintains, or operates an electronic 
shareholder forum is not liable for statements made by another person 
or entity participating in the forum. Also, the amended rules exempt 
any solicitation in an electronic shareholder forum from the proxy 
rules, other than from the shareholder list provisions in Rule 14a-7 
and the antifraud provisions in Rule 14a-9, if all of the conditions to 
the exemption are satisfied. An Initial Regulatory Flexibility Act 
Analysis was prepared in accordance with the Regulatory Flexibility Act 
and included in the Proposing Release.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \57\ 5 U.S.C. 601.

---------------------------------------------------------------------------

[[Page 4457]]

A. Need for the Amendments

    These amendments to the proxy rules are necessary to remove legal 
ambiguity that might deter shareholders, companies, and others from 
establishing or participating in electronic shareholder forums. New 
Rule 14a-17 and the new Rule 14a-2(b)(6) exemption will clarify the 
responsibilities of those who establish, maintain, operate, and 
contribute to electronic shareholder forums, with the purpose of 
stimulating experimentation, innovation, and greater use of the 
Internet to further shareholder communications. By facilitating such 
communications on the Internet among shareholders, and between 
shareholders and their companies, we hope to tap the potential of 
technology to better vindicate shareholders' state law rights, 
including their rights to elect directors, in ways that are potentially 
both more effective and less expensive.
    Despite the potential benefits of electronic shareholder forums, 
shareholders and companies alike have been reluctant to establish, 
maintain, or operate them due, in part, to uncertainty over liability 
for statements and information provided by those participating in the 
forum. In addition, shareholders and companies have expressed concern 
regarding whether views and statements expressed through a forum would 
be considered proxy solicitations.
    Therefore, we are adopting Rule 14a-17 to provide liability 
protection for a shareholder, company, or third party acting on behalf 
of a shareholder or company that establishes or maintains an electronic 
shareholder forum regarding statements or information provided by 
others participating in the forum. Also, we are adopting the new Rule 
14a-2(b)(6) exemption from the proxy rules to explicitly state that 
Rules 14a-3 through 14a-6 (other than Rule 14a-6(g)), Rule 14a-8, and 
Rules 14a-10 through 14a-15 do not apply to any solicitation in an 
electronic shareholder forum. By taking these steps, we hope to remove 
both real and perceived impediments to continued private sector 
experimentation with, and use of, the Internet for communication among 
shareholders, and between shareholders and the companies in which they 
invest. We intend for the amendments to encourage the creation of, and 
participation in, electronic shareholder forums.

B. Significant Issues Raised by Public Comments

    In the Proposing Release, we published for comment a number of 
amendments to the proxy rules under the Exchange Act concerning 
shareholder proposals generally. The description of the proposed 
amendments regarding electronic shareholder forums constituted only one 
section of the release.\58\ In this release, we are adopting only the 
proposed amendments to the proxy rules that relate to electronic 
shareholder forums and not the proposed amendments dealing with other 
aspects of shareholder proposals.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \58\ Proposing Release, Section II.B (Electronic Shareholder 
Forums).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    The majority of the public comment regarding electronic shareholder 
forums was favorable.\59\ Generally, the commenters favored the 
exemption and new rule because they support the continued development 
of electronic shareholder forums as a means of facilitating 
communication among shareholders and between shareholders and 
companies.\60\ A substantial percentage of the commenters opposed 
substituting electronic shareholder forums for the current means of 
presenting non-binding shareholder proposals in the company's proxy 
statement pursuant to Rule 14a-8. Although we solicited comment on the 
idea of using electronic shareholder forums as the sole means to 
present non-binding shareholder proposals to shareholders, several of 
the commenters made it clear that they supported electronic shareholder 
forums provided that the forums were a supplement to, and not a 
replacement for, the current Rule 14a-8 process.\61\ Under the final 
rules, electronic shareholder forums will be an additional, rather than 
substitute, means of communication.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \59\ See, e.g., comment letters from Allstate, BRT, Capital 
Research, GreenMachines, and ICI.
    \60\ See, e.g., comment letter from Calvert, Senator Levin, and 
Van Winthrop.
    \61\ See, e.g., comment letters from Christus, Domini, and 
Trillium.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Additionally, some commenters believed that keeping the identity of 
shareholders who post messages on these electronic forums anonymous 
would threaten meaningful communications among shareholders and the 
company.\62\ These commenters asserted that shareholders' identities 
should be disclosed and that the shareholders' ownership interests in 
the company should be made known as well. The rule amendments that we 
are adopting today neither mandate nor preclude anonymous 
communications because we want to allow forum sponsors to have 
flexibility in creating electronic shareholder forums and to encourage 
innovation and experimentation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \62\ See comment letters from ABA and Christian Brothers.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    Despite the generally favorable reaction, some commenters were 
concerned about possible negative consequences of the amendments. 
First, some commenters worried that the electronic shareholder forums 
could develop into shareholder chat rooms, which may not provide for 
meaningful communication.\63\ Other commenters asserted that we did not 
adequately address whether shareholders and others could wage a 
successful, coordinated proxy campaign beyond the 60-day period during 
which the regular proxy rules would not apply.\64\ Finally, some 
commenters suggested that we analyze the issue further and address 
electronic shareholder forums as part of a more comprehensive study 
reviewing the shareholder communications process.\65\
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \63\ See, e.g., comment letters from Bricklayers, Green Century, 
SIF, and Walden.
    \64\ See comment letters ABA and SunTrust.
    \65\ See comment letters from ABA and SCSGP.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    In the Proposing Release, we requested comment on many aspects of 
the proposed amendments to the proxy rules concerning shareholder 
proposals generally, including the number of small entities that would 
be affected by the proposed amendments, and the quantitative and 
qualitative nature of the impact. Commenters, including the Office of 
Advocacy of the Small Business Administration, addressed several 
aspects of the proposed rule amendments that potentially could have 
affected small entities. However, none of the commenters specifically 
discussed the effect of the proposed amendments regarding electronic 
shareholder forums on small businesses or entities. In particular, 
because the electronic shareholder forums authorized by the amendments 
that we are adopting are entirely voluntary, we believe that they will 
beneficially affect small businesses and entities in the same manner 
that they will beneficially affect larger businesses and entities. This 
is because presumably, only those businesses and entities that find 
them beneficial will choose to use them.

C. Small Entities Subject to the Final Amendments

     The amendments that we are adopting in this release will affect 
only shareholders and companies that voluntarily establish, maintain, 
or operate electronic shareholder forums or that post information on, 
or provide information to, such forums. Some of the companies or 
shareholders may be small entities. Exchange Act Rule 0-

[[Page 4458]]

10(a) defines an issuer, other than an investment company, to be a 
``small business'' or ``small organization'' if it had total assets of 
$5 million or less on the last day of its most recent fiscal year. We 
estimate that there are approximately 1,110 issuers, other than 
investment companies, that may be considered small entities.
    We are adopting the amendments to the proxy rules to facilitate 
electronic shareholder forums by clarifying that participation in a 
forum, which could potentially constitute a proxy solicitation subject 
to the proxy rules, is exempt from most of the proxy rules if the 
shareholder or company satisfies all of the conditions to the 
exemption. Also, we are facilitating electronic shareholder forums by 
clarifying that any shareholder, company, or third party acting on 
behalf of a shareholder or company that establishes, maintains, or 
operates an electronic shareholder forum will not solely because of 
establishing, maintaining, or operating the forum be liable under the 
federal securities laws for any statement or information provided by 
another person participating in the forum. The amendments remove legal 
ambiguity that might deter shareholders and companies from relying on 
this mode of communication.
    The amendments that we are adopting only apply to shareholders, 
companies, or third parties acting on their behalf if they choose to 
establish, maintain, operate, or participate in electronic shareholder 
forums. We are not requiring a small entity to have any involvement 
with electronic shareholder forums. We are only clarifying the 
liability provisions for establishing, maintaining, or operating such a 
forum and providing an exemption for forum communications that fall 
within the broad definition of a solicitation.

D. Reporting, Recordkeeping, and Other Compliance Requirements

    The amended rules do not impose any new reporting, recordkeeping, 
or compliance requirements on small entities. In fact, a small entity 
is not required to take any reporting or recordkeeping action or to 
comply with any other new requirements, unless it chooses to rely on 
the new Rule 14a-2(b)(6) exemption. If a small entity or shareholder 
posts information on a forum in reliance on Rule 14a-2(b)(6), and later 
solicits the power to act as a proxy for a shareholder, it will need to 
determine whether any earlier postings remaining on the forum after the 
Rule 14a-2(b)(6) exemption no longer is available must be filed as 
soliciting materials.\66\ Regardless, if small entities choose to do 
nothing regarding electronic shareholder forums, the amended proxy 
rules have no additional reporting, recordkeeping, or other compliance 
requirements that they must follow.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

    \66\ See 17 CFR 240.14a-1(l)(1)(iii).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------

E. Agency Action To Minimize Effect on Small Entities

    The Regulatory Flexibility Act directs us to consider alternatives 
that would accomplish our stated objectives, while minimizing any 
significant adverse impact on small entities. Our objective in adopting 
the amendments is to facilitate electronic shareholder forums by 
clarifying that participation in a forum is exempt from most of the 
proxy solicitation rules if the participant satisfies all of the 
exemption's conditions, and that forum operators are not liable for 
third-party statements on their forums. The amendments impact small 
entities only if the entities choose to involve themselves in the 
forums by establishing, maintaining, or operating them or by posting 
information on or providing information to the forums. We considered 
alternatives to accomplish our stated objective, but we could not think 
of one that would make electronic shareholder forums more useful to 
small entities because these amendments are voluntary and affect small 
entities only if they chose to participate in them.

VIII. Statutory Basis and Text of the Rules and Amendments

    We are adopting amendments pursuant to Sections 14, 23(a), and 36 
of the Exchange Act, as amended, and Sections 20(a) and 38 of the 
Investment Company Act of 1940, as amended.

List of Subjects 17 CFR Part 240

    Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.


0
In accordance with the foregoing, the Securities and Exchange 
Commission amends Title 17, chapter II of the Code of Federal 
Regulations as follows:

PART 240--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATION, SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 
1934

0
1. The authority citation for part 240 continues to read, in part, as 
follows:

    Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77c, 77d, 77g, 77j, 77s, 77z-2, 77z-3, 
77eee, 77ggg, 77nnn, 77sss, 77ttt, 78c, 78d, 78e, 78f, 78g, 78i, 
78j, 78j-1, 78k, 78k-1, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78p, 78q, 78s, 78u-5, 
78w, 78x, 78ll, 78mm, 80a-20, 80a-23, 80a-29, 80a-37, 80b-3, 80b-4, 
80b-11, and 7201, et seq.; and 18 U.S.C. 1350, unless otherwise 
noted.
* * * * *

0
2. Section 240.14a-2 is amended by adding paragraph (b)(6) to read as 
follows:


Sec.  240.14a-2  Solicitations to which Sec.  240.14a-3 to Sec.  
240.14a-15 apply.

* * * * *
    (b) * * *
    (6) Any solicitation by or on behalf of any person who does not 
seek directly or indirectly, either on its own or another's behalf, the 
power to act as proxy for a shareholder and does not furnish or 
otherwise request, or act on behalf of a person who furnishes or 
requests, a form of revocation, abstention, consent, or authorization 
in an electronic shareholder forum that is established, maintained or 
operated pursuant to the provisions of Sec.  240.14a-17, provided that 
the solicitation is made more than 60 days prior to the date announced 
by a registrant for its next annual or special meeting of shareholders. 
If the registrant announces the date of its next annual or special 
meeting of shareholders less than 60 days before the meeting date, then 
the solicitation may not be made more than two days following the date 
of the registrant's announcement of the meeting date. Participation in 
an electronic shareholder forum does not eliminate a person's 
eligibility to solicit proxies after the date that this exemption is no 
longer available, or is no longer being relied upon, provided that any 
such solicitation is conducted in accordance with this regulation.
    3. Add Sec.  240.14a-17 to read as follows:


Sec.  240.14a-17  Electronic shareholder forums.

    (a) A shareholder, registrant, or third party acting on behalf of a 
shareholder or registrant may establish, maintain, or operate an 
electronic shareholder forum to facilitate interaction among the 
registrant's shareholders and between the registrant and its 
shareholders as the shareholder or registrant deems appropriate. 
Subject to paragraphs (b) and (c) of this section, the forum must 
comply with the federal securities laws, including Section 14(a) of the 
Act and its associated regulations, other applicable federal laws, 
applicable state laws, and the registrant's governing documents.
    (b) No shareholder, registrant, or third party acting on behalf of 
a shareholder or registrant, by reason of establishing, maintaining, or 
operating an electronic shareholder forum, will be liable under the 
federal securities laws for any statement or information provided by 
another person to the electronic shareholder forum. Nothing in this

[[Page 4459]]

section prevents or alters the application of the federal securities 
laws, including the provisions for liability for fraud, deception, or 
manipulation, or other applicable federal and state laws to the person 
or persons that provide a statement or information to an electronic 
shareholder forum.
    (c) Reliance on the exemption in Sec.  240.14a-2(b)(6) to 
participate in an electronic shareholder forum does not eliminate a 
person's eligibility to solicit proxies after the date that the 
exemption in Sec.  240.14a-2(b)(6) is no longer available, or is no 
longer being relied upon, provided that any such solicitation is 
conducted in accordance with this regulation.

    Dated: January 18, 2008.

    By the Commission.
Nancy M. Morris,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. E8-1263 Filed 1-24-08; 8:45 am]

BILLING CODE 8011-01-P
