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SEC Law - Section 16

SEC Law › Section 16

Articles

How Executives And Directors Can Avoid SEC Troubles Before Trading Their Company Stock (Part 2) This is premium content

Before you sell company stock or exercise options, you must understand the securities laws that apply to you. Part 1 of this series focused on insider trading and Rule 10b5-1 plans. This article looks at other pitfalls of securities law, including Section 16(b) violations involving short-swing profits, and at required SEC filings, such as Form 4 and Form 144.

10 Compliance Concerns That Executives Must Understand To Prevent SEC, IRS, And Corporate Problems (Part 1): Company Stock Trades This is premium content

Podcast included! An often underestimated danger companies face is the risk that an executive or employee may violate corporate, tax, or securities laws. This article series outlines practices for executives to help them avoid compliance problems, and explains the possible penalties of noncompliance. Part 1 focuses on compliance issues involving company stock holdings and transactions.

FAQs

What are Forms 3, 4, and 5? When are these insider reports filed with the SEC?

Under Section 16 of the securities laws, senior executives, directors, and large-block shareholders are required to make ongoing filings about their company stock holdings to report any changes. These filings are made on...

When and how do senior executives file Form 4 for restricted stock, restricted stock units, and performance shares? This is premium content

Within two business days of any grant, you file Form 4 electronically under the SEC's Section 16 rules. However, while the filing rules for these grants are similar, there are some important differences...

Where are Forms 3, 4, and 5 filed? This is premium content

One copy of each form must be filed electronically at the SEC...
Show More FAQs (22 more)

If I make a mistake in Form 3, Form 4, or Form 5, how do I amend the filing? This is premium content

The Section 16 filing rules are complex and difficult, and it is easy for you (or your legal counsel) to make mistakes in the filings. Fixing a mistake can require...

Will my company help me prepare and file Forms 3, 4, and 5? This is premium content

The obligation to file reports is yours, not the company's. However...

Is the information filed on Forms 3, 4, and 5 confidential?

No. The reports are public information. The SEC publishes...

UPDATES! When I sell stock under a Rule 10b5-1 plan, do I report the sale differently on Form 4? This is premium content

Only transactions prompt the need for filings: the mere adoption of a 10b5-1 trading plan is...

What is the penalty for the failure to file Form 3, 4, or 5? What if the filing is merely late? This is premium content

In both its proxy statement and its annual report on Form 10-K a public company must name any individual who fails to file any of the forms punctually...

Can I exercise stock options or sell company stock not included in my initial filing of ownership on Form 3? This is premium content

If you have stock options option that, according to the terms of the grant agreement and the stock plan, are vested and exercisable...

What is short-swing profits liability, and how does it affect my stock options and restricted stock? This is premium content

If you are a reporting person under Section 16(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (i.e. you file Forms 3, 4, or 5), then you are also subject to...

What are acceptable methods of avoiding short-swing profits liability? This is premium content

The leading experts on Section 16 suggest ways to structure the transaction in a manner that avoids short-swing profits liability...

If I must disgorge short-swing profits under Section 16(b), do I still have to pay tax on those profits? Do I get a tax deduction for the disgorgement? This is premium content

Having recoverable profits under Section 16(b) for a matching purchase or sale within six months does not mean that you will report the same amount as income for taxes. You calculate the profits under Section 16(b) differently...

If I gift my company stock to a grantor-retained annuity trust (GRAT), do the securities laws still apply? This is premium content

When you are the trustee of a grantor-retained annuity trust (GRAT), and the beneficiary during the annuity payment period, the securities law prohibition on insider trading...

Do senior executives or directors need to make personal SEC filings, such as Forms 4 and 5, for nonqualified deferred compensation plan participation or distributions? This is premium content

Plan participation itself does not trigger any SEC filings for senior executives, directors, and other company insiders. However, Section 16 filings are required if nonqualified deferred compensation for corporate insiders is put into company stock units in a phantom stock account. Filings are required at...

After I leave the company, can I still violate insider-trading or Section 16 rules by exercising options or selling company stock? This is premium content

The prohibition against insider trading and tipping continue to apply to trades in your company stock even after you stop working there...

If I enter into a hedging transaction in my company stock, as a senior executive do I need to report this to the SEC on Form 4? Can I be banned from hedging? This is premium content

The SEC's Division of Enforcement has been investigating executives' reporting of certain derivative securities transactions. When you enter into a hedging type of transaction, such as collars or prepaid variable forward contracts, you need to...

I am a senior executive and plan to sell enough restricted stock at vesting to cover the taxes I will owe. Is this sale still subject to the short-swing profit rules under Section 16? This is premium content

Yes. Assuming the company's grant meets the rules for exemption under Section 16, the grant and vesting are not matchable...

UPDATES! Do Rule 144, Section 16, and the insider-trading rules apply to gifts and donations of company stock by senior executives or directors? This is premium content

Not surprisingly, anything you do with your company stock as an executive or director raises issues involving the securities laws, potential SEC reporting requirements, and liability risks...

Can I donate shares and then immediately buy the same number of shares on the open market? This is premium content

Yes. You may donate company stock to the charity and simultaneously...

I am an officer in my company and want to participate in our ESPP. Do Section 16 reporting and liability for short-swing profits raise any special concerns with an ESPP? This is premium content

If your company's ESPP is qualified under Section 423 of the Internal Revenue Code, the Section 16 ramifications of participating in the plan are not as...

Are there any special securities law issues and filing requirements with stock appreciation rights (SARs) for senior executives and directors? This is premium content

For senior executives, stock-settled SARs avoid the concerns about cashless exercises by officers and directors raised by...
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