Tuesday, February 8, 2011

Charlie wants to keep them furriners off our highways!


From SN-L political reporter Roseann Moring:
Rep. Charlie Denison, the chairman of the House Transportation Committee, said he plans to hold another hearing for a controversial bill that would make driver’s license tests administered in English only.

Denison, R-Springfield, kept on the schedule a hearing for the bill that occurred during the blizzard, when most Missourians could not arrive to testify.

So he said he’ll hold another hour of testimony next Tuesday, and the committee will vote on the bill immediately afterward.
Ah jeez, Charlie, who's gonna drive our cabs?

Just what did we get for our $14,500? A trip to the Ronald Reagan Museum and drinks at a happy hour? Oh yeah, we got a new definition of rape too.


I'll let Bungalow Bill fill you in:
Shortly after Billy Long won his seat to Congress, he began crying about having to take a pay cut.

In his first month in Congress, Billy Long made $14,500 plus expenses and a per diem. Who knows what perks he got from lobbyists, after all, Congressman Long decided to skip the reading of the Constitution to meet with a lobbyist. Let's not forget the broken foot that was injured on the campaign trail was covered as a pre-existing condition with his new Congressional benefits package as well.

So let's take a look at what Long did in his first month that delivered this nice size check into his pocket at the expense of the taxpayers. In his first month of Congress Long voted 21 times. He was not present for one vote. This totals $690 per button push. He introduced no legislation to the floor based on records using the Congress Android and iPhone Ap, and co-sponsored a bill that will increase the size of government and give the Department of Homeland Security more freedom-killing power.

But wait, of those votes, many of them were procedural votes that directed the debate or brought a bill to the floor for a vote. In Long's first month, he only voted twice for the passage of a bill. Which produces an eye opening $7,250 per vote on passage votes. Do you think he broke a sweat? Remember, this was a man who wanted the job, and then began complaining about the pay cut he was going to have to take to serve Southwest Missouri.

By all accounts, it appears Long has returned to the district once in this time, which was last weekend. Long has dedicated himself to the forces he once claimed he was fed up with, spending time with lobbyists and special interest groups, even traveling to California with the establishment. Long still hasn't addressed the media's questions about who is responsible and why his office decided to use the FBI to intimidate his most vocal critic.

Something I noticed about Billy Long during the campaign; he liked to compare himself to the Founding Father's vision of the citizen legislator that came to Washington and represented his district for a short period of time and then came back home to a normal life. What Mr. Long didn't tell you in those speeches is the citizen legislators our Founding Fathers envisioned also went to Washington without the promise of any salary. That's right, there was no such thing as a Congressional salary.

From 1789 to 1855, a member of Congress was paid a $6 per diem. Now Congress has their salaries, their expense accounts, and per diem. Yup, Congressman Long left out that little bit of information about the Founding Fathers as he tried to label himself as the vision of the Founders, and then griped about his pay cut.

Here's something I also want you to consider. Billy Long never laced up combat boots, instead he went to frat parties immediately after school and avoided any military commitment. An E-1 enlisting in the United States military at a time of war in 2011, which means they know when they enlist they are putting their lives on the line, makes $17,611.20 per year. That's right Congress critters like Billy Long, who showed no bravery as a young man and only wanted to serve his country in a suit and not boots, makes almost in one month what a young soldier willing to put his life on the line for his country makes in a year. Long had the nerve enough to complain about taking a pay cut. Really those numbers don't improve much for E-2, E-3, and E-4 ranks in the military either.

Long pushes a button and gets paid the big bucks and complains about his pay cut from his real world existence, while soldiers dodge bullets for much less to fight for the liberty and freedom Long's office attacked in their first month in Congress. I bet Billy Long wouldn't even have run for Congress if Congress was paid a soldiers salary and was forced to live in the conditions a soldier must live in.
In defense to Billy, he did do something while he was in Washington. He co-sponsored a couple of bills.
But I don't think he read them before he signed on to them.

One of the bills Billy co-sponsored re-defines rape and another one called the "Let Women Die" bill.

These two bills are raising some eyebrows in the 7th district and not from the regular Billy watchers. This is a post written by one of the people Billy would let die:
There's a new saying now among the cynical:

"If a woman is raped when no one is around, is she still raped?"

In 1976, Congress passed the Hyde Amendment which prohibits the use of federal funds in cases of abortions. At the moment, under Medicaid, abortions are covered by federal funds in cases of rape, incest, or if the woman's life is endangered. So the debate at the present is the "definition" of rape and how it impacts the use of these funds.

First and foremost, what the public needs to know (and this needs to be reiterated) is the Hyde Amendment forbids federally funded abortions (except in special cases like the ones mentioned above). This means that the government is not footing the bill by giving out abortions like popsicles from an ice cream truck. Much like any amendment, there are restrictions - such as a definition of rape.

Why is this issue arising? The "No Taxpayer Funding for Abortion" aims to "redefine" rape ("forcible" rape vs. "non-forcible" such as statutory rape and incest). In fact, its aim is to eliminate ANY federal funding to cover abortions, even in cases of "non-forcible" rape. So how does this bill promote any sort of woman's right?

It doesn't.

What it does do is take away a woman's right, her voice, her ability to overcome a trauma. The definition of rape is this: if a man forces himself on a woman by shoving his penis inside her vagina without consent, it is rape. If a woman is raped and wants an abortion, she should be able to have one without having to answer questions about the validity of her experience. That is insulting. If a woman becomes pregnant and wants to terminate her pregnancy, she should be able to exercise her Constitutional right. The Speaker Boehner isn't focusing on the real issues here. Furthermore, no one is "pro-abortion" - this is why activists are referred to as "pro-choice."

Rape is a horrific, life altering event. As such, "pro-lifers" are not necessarily pro-life if they are willing to dimish the quality of life for rape victims.
ps-- I thought Billy was out of the real estate/auction business.

Chairman Garrett Calls for Prompt Reform of GSEs While Preserving Vital Securitization

Rep. Scott Garrett (R-NJ) has called for the prompt reform of Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac along the lines of what he calls the Cantor Rules after House Majority Leader Eric Cantor (R-VA). This would be a reform that increases transparency and decreases government exposure. In remarks at the American Securitization Forum, he said that these should be goals in initial decisions regarding GSE reform legislation. Rep. Garrett is Chair of the House Subcommittee on Capital Markets. Full House Committee Chair Spencer Bachus (R-ALA) strongly supports GSE reform legislation.

The first area to address is their portfolios.The combined retained portfolios of Fannie and Freddie are roughly $1.5 trillion. Through the earlier conservatorship agreement, the portfolios are set to decrease by a small percentage each year until they reach a certain set level. Chairman Garrett wants this to happen faster.

One of the risks associated with a $1.5 trillion mortgage book is it contains a significant amount of interest rate risk. As we begin to eventually head into a more volatile interest rate environment, he reasoned, it will become increasingly difficult to hedge a book that size against those movements. He also believes that there are significant unrealized gains in the portfolios that could be realized.

If you look more specifically at the GSEs’ book, he noted, half of it is actual agency mortgage-backed securities, another quarter of it is non-agency mortgage-backed securities, and the rest of the balance includes mortgage loans of all different types.

Some of the assets can be sold off more quickly; he said, others cannot because they are less liquid. The GSEs own different assets and there are specific markets for each of these assets. Congress will closely look at each of the portfolio components and figure out how to wind them down sooner to protect taxpayers.

Comparing what the government has done with Fannie and Freddie to what the FDIC would traditionally do when it takes over a bank, there is a wide discrepancy. The FDIC would normally come in and gain control of the assets and then get rid of them. If the FDIC had taken over the GSEs, he emphasized, they’d be liquidated.

It is also imperative to be completely honest and transparent with taxpayers and put both entities on the federal government’s budget. Currently, the federal government explicitly stands behind all of their securities and debt issuances, he said, and it is thus important to properly account for it.

Also, if the two entities are truly on-budget, he said, those increased budgetary pressures will force Congress and the Administration to deal with them and not let them continue on existing in perpetuity.

The Chairman believes securitization will play an integral part in, and be vital to, the resurrection of the U.S. mortgage market. Indeed, there cannot be a mortgage market of this size without securitization, which, if done correctly and with the proper incentives, can be a very significant part of the cure.

The securitization process, at its core, allows capital to flow more efficiently and effectively from investors to borrowers across the country and even across the world.
Because the securitization process is so vital to the movement of capital, Congress needs to ensure we have a viable and sustainable housing finance system for the future.

Sunday, February 6, 2011

Who is Jan Fisk and why is she saying all those nasty things about Cindy Rushefky?

On Friday a form letter from Jan Fisk was delivered to selected homes across Springfield.

Fisk was pleading for help and money in her zone 2 council race against the incumbent Cindy Rushefsky.

Among other things, Fisk had this to say: "My opponent has a track record of job-killing votes and has demonstrated little understanding about the 'nuts and bolts' planning and decision-making it takes to support job growth and development."

It gets nastier, as she hammers Cindy for her opposition to the Magers development scam: "Unlike my opponent, I will be a council person that works to establish an operational culture that welcomes entrepreneurs and job-creating projects -- instead of making them feel they are standing in front of a firing squad."

One might reasonably guess that the emergence of J. Howard's wife into the electoral world is an attempt to get him voice in two elected positions at the same time. Fisk is the president of the OTC board of trustees, so why not put his proxy on City Council?

What's next Howard? The state legislature?

Jeff Layman, a republican fundraiser and financial consultant is another OTC board rumored to have political aspirations. Recently Layman, who spent in excess of $20,000 for his seat, attended, with Billy Long, a reception at the White House hosted by President Obama for freshman legislators.

Sally Hargis, of Ozarks Coca-Cola and Dr. Pepper bottling company, is the treasurer of Fisk's campaign.

Saturday, February 5, 2011

These are the people who want you to die


From Violet Socks:
If you’re a pregnant woman, that is. You’ve probably read about the “Let Women Die” Act currently in the House; the bill would allow hospitals to simply refuse to provide emergency life-saving medical care to a pregnant woman if such care involves aborting the fetus. I was fascinated to see that the bill, which was introduced by Rep. Joe Pitts (R-Andromeda Galaxy), has 100 co-sponsors. One hundred! That’s almost one-fourth of the entire House of Representatives. Here they are:

Robert Aderholt [R-AL4]
Todd Akin [R-MO2]
Steve Austria [R-OH7]
Michele Bachmann [R-MN6]
Spencer Bachus [R-AL6]
Joe Barton [R-TX6]

Gus Bilirakis [R-FL9]
Diane Black [R-TN6]
Marsha Blackburn [R-TN7]
Kevin Brady [R-TX8]
Paul Broun [R-GA10]
Vern Buchanan [R-FL13]

Ann Marie Buerkle [R-NY25]
Michael Burgess [R-TX26]
Francisco Canseco [R-TX23]
John Carter [R-TX31]
Bill Cassidy [R-LA6]
Jason Chaffetz [R-UT3]

Mike Coffman [R-CO6]
Michael Conaway [R-TX11]
Jerry Costello [D-IL12]
Eric Crawford [R-AR1]
Mark Critz [D-PA12]
Geoff Davis [R-KY4]

Renee Ellmers [R-NC2]
Jeff Flake [R-AZ6]
John Fleming [R-LA4]
Bill Flores [R-TX17]
Jeffrey Fortenberry [R-NE1]
Scott Garrett [R-NJ5]

Bob Gibbs [R-OH18]
John Gingrey [R-GA11]
Louis Gohmert [R-TX1]
Samuel Graves [R-MO6]
Brett Guthrie [R-KY2]
Ralph Hall [R-TX4]

Gregg Harper [R-MS3]
Andy Harris [R-MD1]
Vicky Hartzler [R-MO4]
Tim Huelskamp [R-KS1]
Bill Huizenga [R-MI2]
Lynn Jenkins [R-KS2]

Timothy Johnson [R-IL15]
Walter Jones [R-NC3]
Jim Jordan [R-OH4]
Mike Kelly [R-PA3]
Jack Kingston [R-GA1]
Adam Kinzinger [R-IL11]

John Kline [R-MN2]
Doug Lamborn [R-CO5]
Leonard Lance [R-NJ7]
Thomas Latham [R-IA4]
Robert Latta [R-OH5]
Christopher Lee [R-NY26]

Daniel Lipinski [D-IL3]
Billy Long [R-MO7]
Blaine Luetkemeyer [R-MO9]
Daniel Lungren [R-CA3]
Donald Manzullo [R-IL16]
Kenny Marchant [R-TX24]

Michael McCaul [R-TX10]
Tom McClintock [R-CA4]
Thaddeus McCotter [R-MI11]
David McKinley [R-WV1]
Cathy McMorris Rodgers [R-WA5]
Candice Miller [R-MI10]

Jeff Miller [R-FL1]
Tim Murphy [R-PA18]
Randy Neugebauer [R-TX19]
Alan Nunnelee [R-MS1]
Pete Olson [R-TX22]
Ronald Paul [R-TX14]

Mike Pence [R-IN6]
Thomas Petri [R-WI6]
Ted Poe [R-TX2]
Mike Pompeo [R-KS4]
Phil Roe [R-TN1]
Harold Rogers [R-KY5]

Michael Rogers [R-AL3]
Michael Rogers [R-MI8]
Peter Roskam [R-IL6]
Dennis Ross [R-FL12]
Mike Ross [D-AR4]
Paul Ryan [R-WI1]

Steve Scalise [R-LA1]
Jean Schmidt [R-OH2]
Peter Sessions [R-TX32]
John Shimkus [R-IL19]
Heath Shuler [D-NC11]
William Shuster [R-PA9]

Christopher Smith [R-NJ4]
Lamar Smith [R-TX21]
Marlin Stutzman [R-IN3]
John Sullivan [R-OK1]
Lee Terry [R-NE2]
Glenn Thompson [R-PA5]

Frederick Upton [R-MI6]
Timothy Walberg [R-MI7]
Edward Whitfield [R-KY1]
Bill Young [R-FL10]
I mean to tell you, even Blake knows enough not to co-sponsor this bill!

Commissioner Casey Says Take Time with Dodd-Frank rulemaking, Examines Retroactivity Issue

Calling the Dodd-Frank Act arguably the most significant financial legislation in modern history, SEC Commissioner Kathleen Casey essentially asked Congress to extend some of the Act's rulemaking deadlines. In remarks at the PLI SEC Speaks seminar, she said that the legislation ushers in a breathtaking amount of changes that will result in a tectonic shift in the legal, regulatory and policy landscape affecting markets and the economy in a relatively short period of time. These changes touch every aspect of the financial markets, from consumer credit to proprietary trading at financial firms, from OTC derivatives markets to securitization markets, and from private fund registration and regulation to corporate governance at public companies.

There is a concern that the SEC is not able to fully consider the rules it is adopting, and that short public comment periods imposed in an effort to comply with Dodd-Frank deadlines may undermine their very function of supporting and strengthening the confidence in the rules.As part of this, the cost-benefit analysis is also severely limited and potentially undermined. In turn, this may make the rules more susceptible to challenge on APA grounds, opined the Commissioner.

For these reasons, she urged Congress to consider these risks arising from the implementation of the law and, where appropriate, give regulators additional time to scale its regulatory mandates. Moreover, the same concerns counsel the SEC to focus at this point on only those Dodd-Frank rulemakings that are expressly required by the statute. Where the agency has been granted discretionary rulemaking authority, she noted. the SEC should be judicious in using this authority under circumstances that are not ideal for considered and thorough rulemaking.

In addition, the breadth of Dodd-Frank makes it increasingly important that policy makers stay mindful of the costs and effects that these regulations will have on the markets. The likely impact of Dodd-Frank will be enormous, and the costs not fully calcuable at this time. Given prior experience with Sarbanes-Oxley,the actual costs will prove substantially more significant than legislators and regulators have predicted. Given the unpredictability of these potential costs and effects, both direct and indirect, regulators should proceed very carefully and thoughtfully, and Congress should monitor the law’s implementation closely.


There is also the issue of retroactivity. Congress has periodically granted the Commission new authorities concerning the charges it may bring and the remedies it may seek or impose. Each time Congress does this, it raises a question as to whether the new authorities may be applied to conduct that pre-dated the enactment of the statute. In some instances, the answer may be obvious; however, in many instances, the issue of retroactivity can pose difficult legal and policy questions for the Commission.

The Supreme Court has opined on retroactivity on a number of occasions. Its leading case in this area is Landgraf v. USI Film Products, where the Court discussed the history and significance of the well-established legal presumption against interpreting statutes to have retroactive effect. The Court recognized that the general principle of anti-retroactivity is “deeply rooted in our jurisprudence, and embodies a legal doctrine centuries older than our Republic.”

Retroactive statutes raise particular concerns, said the Commissioner, since they can sweep away settled expectations suddenly and without individualized consideration.

The Landgraf Court went on to lay out an analytic framework for retroactivity cases. First, courts must look to the text of the statute to determine if Congress clearly expressed an intent to apply the provision retroactively; if so, then the inquiry is over. If not, then courts should ask whether the statute, if applied to pre-enactment conduct, “would impair rights a party possessed when he acted, increase a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose new duties with respect to transactions already completed.” Put another way, she noted, courts should ask “whether the new provision attaches new legal consequences to events completed before its enactment.” In conducting this analysis, it would be appropriate for courts to rely on “familiar considerations of fair notice, reasonable reliance, and settled expectations” to guide the inquiry.

Dodd-Frank gave the Commission all sorts of new authority, including in the Enforcement area, and the courts have yet to determine which provisions may be applied retroactively and which may not. Here are a few examples of such provisions:

Section 925 allowed the Commission to impose collateral suspensions and bars across all of the securities professions regulated by the Commission. This section also granted the Commission brand new authority to suspend or bar persons from associating with a municipal advisor or a nationally recognized statistical rating organization (NRSRO).

Section 926 disqualified offerings made by certain “bad actors” from relying on Regulation D as an exemption from registration.

Sections 929M, 929N, and 929O amended the Commission’s authority to bring actions for aiding-and-abetting violations by stating that “knowing or reckless” conduct would suffice to support such liability.

Section 929P granted the Commission authority to impose civil money penalties in all cease-and-desist (C&D) proceedings.
Section 929U imposed deadlines applying to investigation and examinations conducted by Commission staff.

The Enforcement Division has already procured settlements that include Dodd-Frank collateral bars, including the two new bars for which the Commission had no authority prior to Dodd-Frank: the municipal advisor and NRSRO bars.

The misconduct pre-dated the enactment of Dodd-Frank, raising the specter of retroactivity. By imposing the two new Dodd-Frank bars in this settled case, the Commission implied that it has the authority to impose these bars for pre-Act conduct. The more interesting question, however, said the Commissioner, is not how the Commission views its authority, but rather how the federal courts will.

Under the Landgraf framework, look first to whether Congress included a clear statement of retroactive intent in the text of the statute. Unfortunately, Section 925 says absolutely nothing in that regard. The next step in the Landgraf analysis asks whether the statute, if applied to pre-enactment conduct, “would impair rights a party possessed when he acted, increase a party’s liability for past conduct, or impose new duties with respect to transactions already completed” or “whether the new provision attaches new legal consequences to events completed before its enactment.” In doing so, one is guided by “familiar considerations of fair notice, reasonable reliance, and settled expectations.”

Take the hypothetical case of a broker who, prior to Dodd-Frank, confesses to having violated the securities laws. Before Dodd-Frank, the Commission could have imposed a broker-dealer bar on him based on, among other things, his association with a broker or dealer at the time of the misconduct. If that broker were later to associate with, or seek to associate with, an investment adviser, the Commission could have sought to bar him from the investment adviser profession as well. The same would have been true for the municipal securities dealer and transfer agent professions.

Thus, in the Commissioner's view, a person who violated the securities laws prior to Dodd-Frank should have understood that he could be suspended or barred from associating with a broker, dealer, investment adviser, municipal securities dealer, or transfer agent if and when he became associated with, or sought to be associated with, such an entity. One could therefore argue that imposing collateral broker, dealer, investment adviser, municipal securities dealer, or transfer agent bars under Dodd-Frank — based on pre-Dodd-Frank conduct — would not attach new legal consequences to pre-enactment conduct, but rather would merely accelerate the imposition of such consequences.

Billy: Put your money where your mouth is.

"Cowboy boots are often chosen for what they say about their wearer rather than for comfort." Washington Post, May 8, 2007.

The Springfield News-Leader's Sarah Okeson has the story:
Rep. Billy Long is hobbling around these days.

The new congressman, who met Friday afternoon in Springfield with parents and other relatives of people with juvenile diabetes, was quizzed on the walking cast on his right foot.

"I'm styling," Long said. "I went skiing, and I forgot to take my boots off."

It turns out Long has been walking around for months with fractured bones in his foot. X-rays didn't show anything, but he had an MRI which revealed the broken bones. Long said he injured his foot during a parade.

Jessica Hickok, who has type 1 diabetes, and others from the local chapter of the Juvenile Diabetes Research Foundation told Long they want his support for funding for research about diabetes. Foundation officials are meeting with new members of Congress

Billy Long fractured his foot in a parade during the campaign. It wasn't until three months later, when he got on the government healthcare plan that he gets it fixed. Hmm, is this a pre-existing condition? Didn't he vote to repeal that law? He told us during the debates he had health insurance. It looks like the gov't health insurance is better than the plan he had.

Then Billy passes out autographed copies of the constitution (did he get them from the heritage foundation?) Is this to be his 'gimmick', his 'hook', I am reminded of Ralph Manley passing out Eisenhower dollar coins.

Long passed business cards around to the group and suggested that they have the Washington, D.C.-based chapter of the foundation call on him in Washington.

"Just call my scheduler up there," he said. Sort of like "let's do lunch sometime" and "I'm Fed up and no earmarks!"

If Billy really was sincere in assisting these people, he would have pulled out his checkbook right then, and signed the front of a hefty check made out to the Juvenile Diabetes Foundation.

His first weeks in Congress show him to be a media hound who seeks publicity. This is is his first 'public appearance' in Springfield since he's been in congress and it is a soft-ball appearance.

I hate to say this, but I think Billy just used this meeting as an excuse for a photo op. The HCR bill Billy voted to repeal should have told you he was just going through the motions

Long campaigned to cut government spending. He wasted this groups by giving false hope. He didn't waste his time because he got another story about him to add to his scrapbook.

BTW, I am a retired public school teacher on a fixed income. I just made a donation to JDRF via the internet in tribute to Billy Long.

Billy, put your money where your mouth is.

Friday, February 4, 2011

A blind bunny meets a blind snake

Seems the Lee boys are in a fable telling mood this week. Must be the snow.

Anyhow, hop on the old bus and take a ride down to the Haven Lee Farm!

SEC Chair Says Budget Shortfall Affecting Core Mission as Dodd-Frank Rulemaking Intensifies

The continuing resolution that has essentially frozen the SEC budget at 2010 levels has impacted the Commission’s core mission, said Chairman Mary Schapiro, separate and apart from the Dodd-Frank duties to regulate derivatives, hedge fund advisers and credit rating agencies. In remarks at the PLI SEC Speaks seminar, she noted that the budget shortfall has hampered the SEC’s ability to do what investors and capital markets deserve.

Moreover, the budget shortfall has occurred against the backdrop of the more than doubling of the trading volume and a 50 percent increase in the number of investment advisers. While acknowledging the need to find inefficiencies and leverage resources, which the SEC will continue to do, the Chair observed that last year the SEC sent the U.S. treasury nearly $300 million more in collected transaction fees than the agency spent. Further, in the past year, the SEC returned more than $2 billion to harmed investors.

In 2011, the SEC will continue working with the CFTC to shape the regulatory regime for OTC derivatives. The Commissions will define terms, develop requirements for new trading and clearing platforms, craft reporting regulations, carve out end-user exemptions and undertake dozens of other tasks. Along with the banking regulators, the SEC will develop risk retention, or “skin in the game,” requirements for asset backed securities transactions. And, for the first time, issuers of asset-backed securities will perform reviews, required by Dodd-Frank, of the bundled assets as well as disclose the nature, findings and conclusions of these reviews.

The SEC will also consider rules stemming from its recent study recommending that financial professionals who provide personalized investment advice about securities adhere to a fiduciary standard of conduct no less stringent than that imposed on investment advisers. The Commission will finalize rules to leverage the resources of whistleblowers. After all, reasoned Chairman Schapiro, these individuals are closest to fraud and can be an invaluable source of information for enforcement and inspection efforts.

Thursday, February 3, 2011

The Blue Elephant


The Blue Pigeon

The mayor was very worried about a plague of pigeons.

He could not remove the pigeons from the city. The entire city was full of pigeon poop, the people could not walk on the sidewalks, or drive on the roads.

It was costing a fortune to keep the streets and sidewalks clean.

One day a man came to City Hall and offered the Mayor a proposition.

'I can rid your beautiful city of its plague of pigeons without any cost to the city. But, you must promise not to ask me any questions.
Or, you can pay me one million dollars to ask one question.'

The mayor considered the offer briefly and accepted the free proposition.

The next day the man climbed to the top of City Hall, opened his coat, and released a blue pigeon. The blue pigeon circled in the air and flew up into the bright blue sky.

All the pigeons in the city saw the blue pigeon and gathered up in the air behind the blue pigeon. The pigeons followed the blue pigeon as she flew southward out of the city.

The next day the blue pigeon returned completely alone to the man atop City Hall.

The Mayor was very impressed. He felt the man and the blue pigeon had performed a wonderful miraculous feat to rid the city of the plague of pigeons.

Even though the man with the pigeon had charged nothing, the mayor presented him with a check for 1 million dollars and told the man that, indeed, he did have a question to ask and even though they had agreed to no fee and the man had rid the city of pigeons, he decided to pay the 1 million just to get to ask ONE question.

The man accepted the money and told the mayor to ask his ONE question.

Do you think the Mayor is going to ask how the blue pigeon led all the pigeons away?


Do you think the Mayor is going to ask where all the pigeons went?


Do you think he is going to ask where the man got the blue pigeon?


Nooooooo!



'Do you have a blue elephant?'

Former Senior SEC Officials Urge Congress to Adequately Fund the Commission

In a letter to House and Senate leaders, a host of former SEC senior officials, including former Commissioners Annette Nazareth and Irving Pollack, urged Congress to substantially increase appropriations for the SEC through the Commission’s longstanding registration fee mechanism or allow the SEC the same funding model that Congress has used successfully for the nation s banking regulators. While acknowledging the different views in Congress concerning the implementation of Dodd-Frank, the former officials said that protecting investor from fraud, restoring market integrity, and encouraging capital formation are priorities that are too important to sacrifice. And the SEC, they warned, is ``running almost on empty.’’ The letter was also signed by five former Directors of the Corporation Finance Division, two former Enforcement Directors, and four former Directors of the Investment Management Division.

They noted that the Enforcement Division is cutting back on its investigations, letting vacancies in important agency programs go unfilled, and cancelling technology upgrades needed to process the terabytes of data it gets each month. The Inspections Office is being forced to cut the number and frequency of its examinations of financial firms, which were already very infrequent due to historic underfunding of the agency. The acclaimed plan to bring in Wall Street trading experts with the sophistication to understand and appropriately respond to today’s complex trading and markets, including the new technologies and strategies that may have had a role in the flash crash, cannot achieve its promise without funding

This is not about funding Dodd-Frank, said the former officials, but is instead about maintaining at acceptable levels the core activities that have been at the heart of the SEC’s mandate for decades. The current SEC budget freeze has hit not only during the worst crisis the financial markets have faced in 80 years but also after years of effectively flat or declining SEC budgets, after adjusting for escalating fixed costs. And all the while, over a short period, trading volume has more than doubled, the number of investment advisers and the funds they manage have grown over 50%, investment products have become bafflingly complex, and split-second computer-driven trading has come to dominate the markets.

Over a decade ago, Congress put the SEC on an entirely self-funded program under which the Commission carefully calibrates its various securities registration and filing fees several times a year to assure that these user fees will always pay for 100% of the SEC's annual budget in the amount appropriated. Under Section 31(a) of the Exchange Act, as amended by the National Securities Markets Improvement Act of 1996, the SEC must collect transaction fees and assessments designed to recover the costs to the Government of the regulation of securities markets and securities professionals, and costs related to such regulation, including enforcement activities, policy and rulemaking activities, administration, legal services, and international regulatory activities.

The 1996 law requires the SEC to cover its budget solely through registration and filing fees. The amounts the SEC s enforcement staff collects in disgorgement of illegal profits and penalties are paid to harmed investors when they can be located and otherwise to the Treasury. Thus, the SEC s law enforcement determinations are made independent of any consideration of its budgetary needs.

According to the former officials, there has been no serious objection over the years to this 1996 Congressional determination to have the SEC fund its budget entirely through registration and filing fees, and the amounts assessed have been miniscule relative to the transactions involved. And, while a slight increase in these very small fees to cover needed SEC funding will in no way hinder capital formation, the alternative of a perception of inadequately regulated securities markets will deter investors from risking their capital and thereby stall economic growth.

Alternatively, the banking agency model should be adopted for the SEC. Over the years,many have suggested putting the SEC on the same footing as the federal banking agencies by adding to the SEC s existing self-funding the ability to self-budget. Self-budgeting, which the self-funded federal banking agencies have done for many years, permits the banking agencies to set their own budgets on a timely and adequate basis, and without getting lost in the inevitable complexities of the annual appropriations process. This lets the banking agencies in times of crisis respond quickly to changes in staffing and other program needs and to engage in long-range (multi-budget-year) planning by setting their own budget levels and then paying their own way through user fees.

While under a self-budgeting process, assured the former officials, the SEC will always remain subject to Congressional oversight. If Congress is concerned, it can call hearings to demand explanations, and if still not satisfied, legislate to correct any perceived problems. The banking agencies remain keenly aware that they must use their self-budgeting power prudently, they noted, or Congress will modify it or take it away entirely, and the SEC would be just as mindful of this reality.

US Hedge Fund Industry Comments on European Commission Proposed Changes to MiFID

While generally supporting the increased transparency embodied in the European Commission’s proposed reform of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID), the US hedge fund industry is concerned that proprietary or confidential information of individual investors may be disclosed to the public. In a letter to the Commission, the MFA, chaired by former US Rep. Richard Baker, also voiced concern that the idea of introducing a third country regime in MiFID based on the principle of equivalence could be viewed as protectionist. Further, while noting that automated trading and high frequency trading can be beneficial to financial markets, MFA is concerned that the proposed definition of automated trading could capture certain types of trading which rely on execution strategy algorithms, but which do not necessarily relate to the execution of orders. The MFA supports the development of exchange-traded products as a complement to OTC derivatives but notes the advice from CESR that this should be encouraged rather than mandated at this point in time.


In announcing the proposed revisions, Commissioner for the Internal Market Michel Barnier said that the original aim of this key piece of European legislation, MiFID, was to create a robust common regulatory framework for EU securities markets. In many ways, it has been a success. The goal of the proposed revision is to adapt the MiFID regulatory framework to the new trends and players on financial markets to provide greater market transparency and more investor protection.

MFA concerns over the disclosure of hedge funds’ proprietary or confidential information relating to their investment strategies, portfolio holdings and investors, is based on the fact that such information is highly sensitive from a competitive standpoint and thus funds employ substantial safeguards to protect this information. Moreover, an investment manager’s strategies typically include multiple components and the disclosure of pieces of data would be incomplete and inherently difficult to understand. As a result, reasoned MFA, such information in isolation would be misleading to investors, which could have negative consequences should they misguidedly try to act on it. Given the sensitive nature of such information, MFA believes that it is critical to have strong confidentiality safeguards in place to protect the proprietary interests of individual investors and the welfare of the financial markets.

MFA is also concerned by the Commission’s statement that third country financial firms (read non-EU firms) must be subject to a regulatory regime which is at least equivalent to that offered by MiFID. The association urged the Commission to reconsider applying, on a pan-EU basis, access based on what is essentially a strict equivalence standard. The concern is that such a standard implies that no aspect of a regulatory regime imposed by the US or other third country could be different from that of the standard set in MiFID, which may give the impression that the EU is taking a protectionist stance. In addition, setting such a high standard would prevent EU investors from seeking investment opportunities in US and other non-EU economies which may have comparable regulatory standards, but do not meet the strict equivalence standard.

Since the Commission should focus on conduct and not the proprietary analytical processes of investment decision making, the MFA suggested that the proposed definition of automated trading be changed to clarify that it relates only to the execution aspects of the order rather than to the investment strategy employed in the selection of investments. Algorithmic trading is often used by asset managers as a proprietary tool in selection of investments based on pre-determined parameters. It would neither be appropriate nor practical, said MFA, to apply the organizational requirements proposed by the Commission to investors employing algorithms in their investment selection and, in particular, require them to notify and explain the design and functioning of proprietary algorithms to a regulator.

In MFA’s view, the activity of investment selection by the use of algorithms does not carry the same risk of impacting the market. How an investor reaches a decision to buy or sell a security should be inconsequential, the group reasoned, on the other hand, trading practices, or how investors operate in the markets can impact market functioning.

Similarly, MFA asked the Commission to clarify the proposed definition of high frequency trading to indicate that the focus is on firms which trade on their own capital in exchange-traded markets, rather than on asset managers which act as agents for investment funds they may manage.

Regarding the issue of whether all high frequency traders over a set minimum would have to be authorized, MFA does not believe that there is any reason that the underlying investment funds or managed accounts should themselves have to be authorized. The investment managers would already be regulated either as portfolio managers under MiFID, alternative investment fund managers under the AIFM Directive or as managers of UCITS under the UCITS Directive.

If the Commission believes there are unregulated principal trading firms that need to be similarly authorized, the MFA would support a level playing field where all market participants are subject to oversight. Separately, MFA would be concerned about any extraterritorial requirements such that non-EU asset managers would not be able to use high frequency trading techniques in relation to shares admitted to trading on EU markets unless regulated by an EU regulator.

Given clarification of the definitions, MFA supports the Commission proposals to require firms engaging in automated trading to have risk controls, including pre-trade checks and risk management controls, particularly where these can be standardized on a global basis. In this context, MFA noted that similar steps have been taken in the United States, in particular SEC Rule 15c3-5 prohibiting naked access. Broker-dealers that provide direct access to trading securities to persons other than broker-dealers must maintain a system of risk management and supervisory controls relating to the provision of such access. Those controls must be reasonably designed to limit the financial exposure of the broker-dealer providing access, and ensure compliance with regulatory requirements applicable to providing access.

The MFA also supports risk controls such as market-wide single stock circuit breakers or limit up/limit down systems since they will help curtail disruptions during times of market stress. However, the group cautioned that such risk controls must be of short duration and triggered only in limited instances, so as to provide a cooling-off period and add to investor confidence by removing a potential panic scenario, and not triggered by erroneously-reported prices.
The MFA does not support risk controls such as speed bumps, trading delays or specified maximum execution speeds because they would likely harm investors by increasing trading and transaction costs.

The MFA cautioned the Commission against hard position limits in favor of a position management approach. The mechanical imposition of position limits for commodity derivatives would have the effect of reducing liquidity and the ability of commercial participants to hedge against future changes in price by limiting the ability of market participants to diversify and reduce risk. It is also likely to reduce the competitiveness of European markets, said MFA, and indeed may distort global commodity derivatives markets. Thus, MFA urged the Commission to consider alternatives to position limits, such as enhanced post-trade transparency obligations and reporting of derivatives position

While supporting the concept that position information should be made available to the public only on an aggregated basis, MFA is concerned about the disclosure of position-level data that includes the identities of the counterparties and other sensitive details. Trading strategies are often complex with various pieces combining to express a single view, the group noted, and a narrow perspective could lead to misunderstanding and potentially misuse.

Also, given the multitude of national regulators involved, unfettered access without precondition could have harmful side effects on the markets. Thus the Commission was urged to establish a reasonable threshold or nexus requirement for a regulator in one member state to gain access to data from an organized trading venue in another member state. Without constraining legitimate interests, such a requirement would appropriately balance the proprietary nature of market transactions with the overall goals of the regulation.

The MFA supports the proposal to give national regulators the power to temporarily ban or restrict the trading or the distribution of a product by investment firms so long as this power is, as the Commission proposes, exercised on pre-notified and coordinated basis through the new European Securities and Markets Authority. However, MFA asked the Commission to consider a mechanism under which such coordination with ESMA would involve having ESMA consider the proposed action by the national regulator within a certain time, issue advice to the national regulator as to whether the action is appropriate, and give the market sufficient notice of the proposed action so that its effect can be properly absorbed without causing market instability.

German BaFin Extends Short Selling Disclosure Regime until March of 2012.

The German Federal Financial Supervisory Authority (BaFin) has extended its General Decree of March 2010 imposing a regime of two-tier transparency for net short selling positions. The Decree, scheduled to expire Jan. 31, 2011, was extended until March 25, 2012. Under the Decree, market participants must notify BaFin of net short-selling positions in selected financial stocks of a threshold of 0.2 % or more and publish the same of a threshold of 0.5 % or more. The provision relates to all transactions which, in terms of the holder’s aggregate economic interest, result in a net short-selling position in shares of a number of enumerated companies. The General Decree is oriented on the CESR proposals for a pan-European transparency system for net short-selling positions.

The hedge fund industry has generally supported this disclosure regime for the private reporting of short sale positions. The Managed Fund Association, headed by former US Rep. Richard Baker, believes that BaFin has taken a responsible approach to increasing regulator access to short selling information while also protecting investors, and encourages other regulators to strike the same balance. The German Alternative Investments Association also supports BaFin’s effort to preserve investor participation and confidence in markets by keeping short position reporting private and, when made public, anonymous.

The MFA also believes that public disclosure of short position information should be done in a manner that mitigates costs to investors. The BaFin approach recognizes that market abuse is distinct from legitimate short selling, which allows investors to mitigate risk, provide needed liquidity to markets, and aid in capital formation.

For its part, the MFA strongly supports efforts to prevent market manipulation and abuse because, as investors, MFA members have a strong interest in stable, liquid, and honest markets. The MFA urges BaFin to track, analyze, and make public the impact of its disclosure requirements on the functioning of equity markets. Such data will enable BaFin and market participants to better judge the effectiveness of the regulations at the end of the enforcement period, said the industry group.

The BaFin short sale disclosure provision relate to all transactions which, in terms of the holder’s aggregate economic interest, result in a net short-selling position in shares of enumerated financial institutions, including Deutsche Bank and Allianz Se. A net short-selling position arises if the aggregation of the holder’s financial instruments results in a net exposure on the short side. This applies regardless of whether the underlying transaction was concluded in Germany or abroad, emphasized BaFin, or on a regulated market or OTC. There is an exemption for market makers to the extent the transaction is required for performance of their contractual obligations.

Further, all types of financial instruments have to be included in the calculation, including option transactions, swaps and financial instruments that are based on indices and baskets and at least partly include the specified stocks. Inclusion of such financial instruments takes place regardless of a minimum percentage by which the specified financial stocks have to be represented in the respective product.

BaFin will not allow the netting of positions within a group with reference to one of the stocks specified. Also, within group structures, the notification must take place at the level of the respective legal entity. In the case of investment funds, no netting takes place at the level of the respective investment company; instead, the net short-selling positions of the individual common funds must be disclosed.

There is no additional obligation for financial institutions to monitor compliance with the provisions. However, this is without prejudice to the obligation to report suspicious transactions pursuant to German law. BaFin recommends that financial institutions draw their customers’ attention to the General Decree. The German federal regulator also cautioned that the deliberate submission of false notifications may constitute a violation of the prohibition of market manipulation under German law.

Wednesday, February 2, 2011

Just how marxist is #hcr, Billy Long?

Ozark Billy signs on to re-define rape


From The Erstwhile Conservative: One would think that those job-jobs-jobs House Republicans would by now have come up with a magic law that would cause the unemployment rate to fall to Clinton-era respectability. One would think.

And one would think that H.R. 3—the third bill out of the House Republican moot chute—would be named something like the, “Get The Lazy Unemployed Back to Work Act.“

But nope. H.R. 3 is titled, the “No Taxpayer Funding For Abortion Act.” Get that? After two years of complaining about Obama’s economy and bemoaning the lack of job growth, newly empowered Republicans have managed to pass a futile health reform repeal bill and now are working on what Sady Doyle at Salon has called, “John Boehner’s push to redefine rape.” And Billy Long is right in the middle of it.

Yes. Our congressman, Ozark Billy, is co-sponsoring a bill that redefines rape.

The proposal is ostensibly aimed at prohibiting “taxpayer funded abortions and to provide for conscience protections, and for other purposes.” It’s those “other purposes” that should worry women everywhere.

Sady Doyle discusses the proposal and those other purposes in the context of the Hyde and Stupak amendments, major topics during the health care reform fight last year:

Whereas Stupak-Pitts provides an exemption if “the pregnancy is the result of an act of rape or incest,” and Hyde contains exemptions that are similar, H.R. 3 only provides exemptions if the pregnancy results from “an act of forcible rape or, if a minor, an act of incest.”

Get that? “Forcible.” “If a minor,” it must be “an act of incest.” The changes are intentional and they are not trivial, says Doyle:

This is a calculated move, which will make exemptions for rape and incest survivors practically unenforceable.

I know it’s hard for some people to believe, but there are anti-choice folks out there who don’t think abortion should be legal under any circumstances, rape or incest included. And whittling away at the definition of rape certainly narrows the field of potential candidates.

Doyle makes her case about what the choice of language means:

Those who were raped while drugged or unconscious, or through means of coercion, would not be covered. Survivors of statutory rape would not be covered: “if a minor,” one is only covered in case of incest. And if one is a survivor of incest, and not a minor, that’s also not covered. Studies of how rapists find and subdue victims reveal that about 70 percent of rapes wouldn’t fall under the “forcible” designation.

Doyle also points out that there is no definite legal understanding of what constitutes “forcible rape,” and then the kicker:

…every survivor who finds herself in need of abortion funding will have to submit her rape for government approval.

Government approval. Not only would the rapist victimize her, but a woman could be victimized again by a bureaucrat or judge—a rape panel?—who may determine her case doesn’t comport with the “ancient, long-outdated standard of rape law: ‘Utmost resistance’“:

There’s an example of how “utmost resistance” worked in the 1887 text Defences to Crime. In this case, a man was accused of raping a 16-year-old girl. (A minor, but not incest: Already convicted by current standards, not enough for H.R. 3.) The attacker held her hands behind her back with one of his hands. I asked my partner to test this move’s “forcefulness,” by holding my wrists the same way; I was unable to break his grip, though he’s not much larger than I am, and it hurt to struggle. The attacker then used his free hand and his leg to force open her legs, knocked her off-balance onto his crotch, and penetrated her.

His conviction was overturned. Because the girl was on top. Then, there were the witnesses: One man watched it all, and noted that “though he heard a kind of screaming at first, the girl made no outcry while the outrage was being perpetrated.” The physician who examined her testified that “there were no bruises on her person.” It was therefore determined that the encounter was consensual. In the words of Defences to Crime, “a mere half-way case will not do … this was not the conduct of a woman jealous of her chastity, shuddering at the thought of dishonor, and flying from pollution.” Stopped screaming eventually? You wanted it.

“Rape law is filled with cases like these,” Doyle says.

The good news about all this is that led by Doyle, there is something of a public outcry about the games anti-choice fanatics are playing with the language. The bad news is that even if the language is corrected, the bill will move ahead and may become federal law.

Besides Ozark Billy Long, here are other co-sponsors from Missouri:

Vicky Hartzler; Todd Akin; Jo Ann Emerson; Sam Graves; Blaine Luetkemeyer

And out of only a handful of Democratic co-sponsors, naturally the Democratic impostor from Oklahoma, Dan Boren, is on the list.
Here is Billy Long’s contact information:
Joplin: 2727 E. 32nd St., Suite 2 ZIP: 64804
Springfield: 3232 E. Ridgeview St. ZIP: 65804
Phone: (417) 889-1800 Fax: (417) 889-4915
Washington, DC: 1541 Longworth HOB ZIP: 20515
Phone: (202) 225-6536 Fax: (202) 225-5604
Official website contact page: https://long.house.gov/contact-me

Tuesday, February 1, 2011

SEC Asked to Clarify Proposed Commodity Trading Advisor Exemption from Dodd-Frank Mandated Hedge Fund Registration

The hedge fund industry has urged the SEC to clarify the exemption from registration in the Dodd-Frank Act for CFTC-registered commodity trading advisors to private funds. In a letter to the SEC, the Managed Funds Association, reasoning by analogy, suggested that the SEC use the factors in a 1983 no-action letter determining a fund’s primary business in adopting regulations on whether a commodity trading advisor is predominantly engaged in providing advice on securities, which would cause the exemption to be lost.

Section 403 of the Dodd-Frank Act amended the Investment Advisers Act to provide a new exemption from registration with the SEC for an investment adviser that is registered with the CFTC as a commodity trading advisor and advises a private fund. However, if after the date of enactment of Dodd-Frank, the business of the advisor should become predominately the provision of securities-related advice, then the adviser must register with the Commission. In determining whether the new exemption is available, an investment adviser that is currently registered as a commodity trading advisor must assess whether its business is, or becomes, predominately the provision of securities-related advice. In the view of the MFA, such a determination depends in significant part on the definition of the term “predominately,” but that term is not defined in the Dodd-Frank Act.

In addition to adding a new exemption for commodity trading advisors to private funds, Dodd-Frank retained the existing section 203(b)(6) exemption for any investment adviser that is registered with the CFTC as a commodity trading advisor whose business does not consist primarily of acting as an investment adviser and that does not act as an investment adviser to a registered investment company or a business development company.

According to the MFA, the legislative intent of Section 403 is to recognize that CTAs to private investment funds, which are primarily engaged in the business of providing advice regarding futures and are already subject to a comprehensive regulatory framework, do not have to be dually registered. It further reflects the congressional view that requiring these CTAs to register with both the SEC and the CFTC would subject them to a duplicative regulatory framework and potentially inconsistent regulations.

Clarification of the Dodd-Frank exemption is necessary. In this regard, the MFA noted that in September of 2009, it filed a comment letter with the SEC and the CFTC recommending that they consider the factors addressed in the SEC’s Peavey Commodity Futures Fund no-action letter. The comment letter was in connection with the pre-Dodd-Frank registration exemption for commodity trading advisors whose business does not consist of acting as an investment adviser. But the MFA believes that the factors addressed in the Peavey no-action letter provide an appropriate framework for determining the predominant business of an investment adviser that is also a commodity trading advisor pursuant to the new Dodd-Frank exemption. Thus, the MFA believes that the factors under the Peavey analysis are appropriate for determining the primary business activity of an adviser and whether it should be registered with the CFTC, SEC or both.

Under the Peavey analysis, in determining whether an entity investing in futures was
otherwise primarily engaged in the business of investing in securities so as to be an investment company, the SEC considered the composition of the entity’s assets, the sources of its income, the area of business in which it anticipated realization of the greatest gains and exposure to the largest risks of loss, the activities of its officers and employees, its representations, its intentions as revealed by its operations, and its historical development.

The SEC recognized that with respect to a commodity pool, a snapshot picture of its balance sheet contrasting the value of its futures contracts (unrealized gain on such contracts) with the value of its other assets may not reveal the primary nature of the business as a pool’s reserves and margin deposits are generally in the form of United States government notes and other securities. In Peavey, the SEC stated that of greatest importance in its analysis was the area of business in which the entity anticipated realization of the greatest gains and exposure to the largest risks of loss as revealed by its operations on an annual or other suitable basis For example, a company’s anticipated gains and losses in futures trading as compared to its anticipated gains and losses on its government securities and other securities.

By analogy, the MFA believes that the Peavey factors are appropriate for determining the primary business activity of an adviser and whether it should be registered with the CFTC, SEC or both. Accordingly, the MFA recommend that the Commissions, in determining whether an adviser is acting primarily or predominantly as an investment adviser or a commodity trading advisor, consider the Peavey analysis, which in this context would mean the composition of the adviser’s assets, the sources of its income, the area of business in which the adviser anticipates realization of the greatest gains and exposure to the largest risks of loss, the activities of its officers and employees, its representations, its intentions as revealed by its operations, and its historical development.

SEC Adopts Regulations Implementing Dodd-Frank Say-on-Pay Mandates

The SEC has adopted regulations implementing the provisions of the Dodd-Frank Act relating to shareholder approval of executive compensation and disclosure and shareholder approval of golden parachute compensation arrangements. New Rule 14a-21 provides for separate shareholder advisory votes to approve executive compensation, to approve the frequency of such votes on executive compensation, and to approve golden parachute compensation arrangements. The SEC rules specify that say-on-pay votes must occur at least once every three years beginning with the first annual shareholders' meeting taking place on or after Jan. 21, 2011. Companies also are required to hold a non-binding frequency vote at least once every six years in order to allow shareholders to decide how often they would like to be presented with the say-on-pay vote. Following the frequency vote, a company must disclose on a Form 8-K how often it will hold the say-on-pay vote.

The Commission also adopted a temporary exemption for smaller reporting companies with a public float of less than $75 million. These smaller companies are not required to conduct say-on-pay and frequency votes until annual meetings occurring on or after Jan. 21, 2013. The Dodd-Frank Act authorizes the Commission to exempt an issuer or class of issuers, but only after considering a number of factors including whether this disproportionate burden exists. SEC Chairman Mary Schapiro said that the two-year deferral period is designed to assist the Commission in its consideration of these factors and will enable adjustment of the rule if appropriate before it applies to smaller issuers.

The SEC amended Rule 14a-4, which relates to the form of proxy that companies are required to include with their proxy materials to require that issuers present four choices to their shareholders in connection with the advisory vote on frequency. Shareholders must be provided the opportunity to cast an advisory vote on whether the shareholder vote on executive compensation will occur every 1, 2, or 3 years, or to abstain from voting on the matter. Those are the four choices shareholders will be offered. Because the shareholder vote on the frequency of voting on executive compensation is advisory, the SEC did not believe it necessary to prescribe a standard for determining which frequency has been “adopted” by the shareholders.

The rules also require additional disclosure in the Compensation Discussion and Analysis regarding whether, and if so how, companies have considered the results of the most recent say-on-pay vote. Other changes to Item 402 of Regulation S-K require additional CD&A disclosure about the company’s response to the shareholder vote on executive compensation and to provide additional disclosure about golden parachute compensation arrangements. Form 8-K was also amended to require disclosure regarding the company’s action as a result of the shareholder advisory vote on the frequency of shareholder votes on executive compensation

Item 402 of Regulation S-K was also ed to require companies to discuss in CD&A whether and, if so, how their compensation policies and decisions have taken into account the result of the most recent shareholder advisory vote on executive compensation. Although it is not mandated by Dodd-Frank, the SEC believe that including this mandatory topic in CD&A will facilitate better investor understanding of issuers’ compensation decisions. Because the shareholder advisory vote will apply to all issuers, the SEC views formation about how issuers have responded to such votes as more in the nature of a mandatory principles-based topic than an example. The manner in which individual companies may respond to such votes in determining executive compensation policies and decisions will likely vary depending upon facts and circumstances. The SEC expects that this variation will be reflected in the CD&A disclosures.

New Item 402(t) of Regulation S-K implements and supplements the statutory requirement in Section 14A(b)(1) to promulgate rules for the clear and simple disclosure of golden parachute compensation arrangements that the soliciting person has with its named executive officers (if the acquiring issuer is not the soliciting person) or that it has with the named executive officers of the acquiring issuer that relate to the merger transaction. In addition, Item 402(t), will supplement the requirements of Section 14A(b)(1) by requiring disclosure of golden parachute compensation arrangements between the acquiring company and the named executive officers of the target company if the target company is the soliciting person.

The golden parachute disclosure also is required in connection with other transactions, including going-private transactions and third-party tender offers, so that the information is available for shareholders no matter the structure of the transaction.

Because a company should be permitted to exclude subsequent shareholder proposals that seek a vote on the same matters as the shareholder advisory votes on say-on-pay and frequency, the SEC added a note to Rule 14a-8(i)(10) to permit the exclusion of a shareholder proposal that would provide a say-on-pay vote, seeks future say-on-pay votes, or relates to the frequency of say-on-pay votes. Specifically, the note will permit exclusion of such a shareholder proposal if, in the most recent shareholder vote on frequency of say-on-pay votes, a single frequency (i.e., one, two or three years) received the support of a majority of the votes cast and the issuer has adopted a policy on the frequency of say-on-pay votes that is consistent with that choice. For purposes of this analysis, an abstention would not count as a vote cast.