Einde inhoudsopgave
Cross-border Enforcement of Listed Companies' Duties to Inform (IVOR nr. 87) 2012/1.1
1.1 Background
mr.drs. T.M.C. Arons, datum 07-05-2012
- Datum
07-05-2012
- Auteur
mr.drs. T.M.C. Arons
- JCDI
JCDI:ADS368465:1
- Vakgebied(en)
Ondernemingsrecht (V)
Voetnoten
Voetnoten
Recital 10 PD 2003.
Recital 19 PD 2003.
Art. 6(1) PD 2003.
CE The European Commission seeks to remedy this situation by introducing a principle of private law liability for investment services providers who violated conduct of business obligations, e.g. information duties, towards their clients whereby the latter incurred losses. In this way, the Commission wants to ensure equal protection of investors in the EU. Public Consultation, Review of the Markets in Financial Instruments Directive (MiFID) ('Public Consultation MiFID'), 8 December 2010, point 7.2.6., p. 63. Available at: http://ec.europa.eu/intemal_market/consultations/docs/2010/mifid/consultation_paper_en.pdf.
I define corporate misinformation as all non-contractual duties to disclose information about the corporation to the financial market participants in a prospectus or the periodical annual accounts, half-yearly and quarterly financial reports. Violations of conduct of business rules in the investment field, such as the investment firm's duty to properly advise investors, are not included. Because of their more individual nature, these claims are less qualified for treatment at a collective level. CE Delmas/Ract- report, p. 31. However, some higher courts are inclined to rule in test cases on how lower courts should handle damage claims arising from identical or similar contracts. CE the Dutch Supreme Court decision of 5 June 2009 in De Treek v Dexia, JOR 2009 (199) with commentary from C.W.M. Lieverse, Levob v Bolle, RvdW 2009 (684) and Stichting Gedupeerden Spaarconstructie v Aegon, JOR 2009 (200) with commentary from C.W.M. Lieverse. Castermans affirms this positron to deal with underlying contractual claims based on a violation of the Unfair Commercial Practices tules in a Dutch collective action procedure enacted in s. 3:305a DCC (Castermans (2011), pp. 206-207).
Recital 20 and recital 41 PD 2003.
Recital 7.
CE Lomnicka (2008), p. 263: 113]rivate international law principles provide the answer in relation to private law issues whilst the principle of territoriality applies when it comes to regulatory rules. In practice these traditional principles are notoriously uncertain in their application. This uncertainty is, in itself, enough to impede cross-border activity. However, in addition, they often lead to the applicability of more than one legai system and the extra burden this duplication imposes also makes cross-border activity unattractive.' Also: Kbnig (2004), p. 285.
The policy goal of the European Prospectus Directive 2003 is, amongst others, to ensure investor protection.1 The Directive prescribes that, with some exemptions and exceptions, issuers are obliged to publish and distribute a prospectus before their securities can be listed on a regulated market (stock exchange) or be offered to the public. In the interests of actual and potential investors, the prospectus must contain such information as to enable them to make an informed assessment of the risks attached to the particular issuer and its securities. In this way, investors will be able to take investment decisions with full knowledge of the facts.2
The Prospectus Directive 2003 and the Prospectus Regulation 2004 prescribe in detail the content and format of the information that has to be provided in the prospectus. This Directive, which is in line with previous Prospectus Directives, puts great emphasis on public enforcement of the harmonised prospectus rules: a public authority has to approve the draft prospectus before the issuer is allowed to publish it. However, this Directive does not harmonise the private law prospectus liability regimes in the Member States. It merely prescribes that the Member States ensure that at least the issuer and/or its administrative, management or supervisory bodies, the offeror, the person asking for admission to trading on a regulated market or the guarantor, as the case may be, can be held accountable for the information provided in a prospectus.3 In general, the European legislator has not given the necessary attention to private enforcement of the harmonised financial information duties.4
Prospectus liability claims, as well as other corporate misinformation claims,5 are often most effectively enforced by collective enforcement. In these mass damage cases, collective enforcement serves as a procedural tool to deal with similar claims arising from the same event. Usually the amount of damages claimed by the individual investor is not too small to warrant individual enforcement. Therefore, the collective enforcement in these cases, unlike in small claim cases, does not seek to compensate the claimants for relatively high procedural costs involved with individual enforcement.
I started this research in September 2007, because I realised that due to its inherent tensions and inconsistencies, a system of harmonised information requirements regarding prospectuses enforced by a single home Member State supervisory authority and divergent private law prospectus liability regimes could not achieve its main goals: ensure (equal) protection of investors and a level playing field for all financial market participants.6 Issuing companies are likely to take into account the applicable prospectus liability regime when choosing the location of their listing. Issuers may be attracted by liability regimes where the burden is high for investors to establish liability for those involved in the publication and distribution of the prospectus.
The currently absent of alignment of public and private enforcement regimes that apply to the prospectus information requirements also prevents the establishment of a well-enforced EU-wide system of uniform prospectus rules and listing requirements as desired by the European legislator. Under the Prospectus Directive 2003 regime, the home Member State determines and enforces the prospectus' content regardless of where the issuer 's securities are to be listed or offered to the public. The home Member State is, in principle, the Member State where the issuer has its registered or statutory seat. In the absence of a harmonised private law liability regime, the Rome II regulation on the law applicable to non-contractual obligations determines the law applicable to prospectus liability claims. Because this regulation does not provide for a special private international law rule in regard to these claims, the default rule of lex loci damni applies. Therefore, the law of the place where the claimant sustained his investment losses determines the applicable prospectus liability mies. The place where the investors sustain their losses is, in accordance with the European Court of Justice's case law in regard to the Brussels I regulation of jurisdiction and recognition of judgments in civil and commercial matters, the place where the investors hold their investment account. The laffer case law is relevant for determining the applicable law as well, because the Rome II regulation prescribes that its substantive scope and its provisions have to be consistent with the Brussels I regulation.7
In our modern liberalised financial markets, it is very common that investors subscribing for the securities on offer are domiciled in many different jurisdictions. It is highly likely that investors hold their investment account in the same jurisdiction as where they are domiciled. In this situation, tensions may arise because the jurisdiction determining the prospectus contents is not the same as the jurisdiction determining the prospectus liability regime. The issuer could be confronted with successful liability claims in regard to a prospectus that complies with the home Member State's information requirements, but not with the private law prospectus information requirements. A further complicating factor is the fact that many different laws apply to the various prospectus liability claims filed by investors domiciled in different jurisdictions.8 The following sketch of the optimum situation to achieve (some form of) equal protection of investors may illustrate the problems arising from these divergences.