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Foreign Private Issuers Going Public in the U.S.

Similar to a Foreign Issuer, which can be a foreign government, a national of any foreign country, or a corporation or other organization incorporated or organized under the laws of any foreign country that issues stock in the U.S., a Foreign Private Issuer is any Foreign Issuer other than a national government. Qualifying as a Foreign Private Issuer provides benefits to issuers under the SEC, including reduced disclosure obligations and relaxed financial statement requirements. A Foreign Issuer can offer the same securities that a U.S. Issuer may offer.

Qualifying as a Foreign Private Issuer

For an issuer to qualify as a Foreign Private Issuer, there are two tests provided by the SEC. A foreign company will qualify as a foreign private issuer if either: 

(a)  50% or less of its outstanding voting securities are held by U.S. residents, or

(b)  more than 50% of its outstanding voting securities are held by U.S. residents and none of the following apply:

(i) the majority of its executive officers or directors are not U.S. citizens or residents;

 (ii) more that 50% of the issuer’s assets are not located in the U.S.; and

 (iii) the issuer’s business is not principally administered in the U.S.

If the SEC determines that the foreign company is a Foreign Private Issuer, the company may use registration and reporting forms specifically for Foreign Private Issuers.

Registration & Forms

There are several types of registration and reporting forms available to Foreign Private Issuers.  

Form F-1

A Foreign Private Issuer may offer securities in the form of American Depository Receipts using Form F-6. However, Foreign Issuers most commonly choose to register their common stock in an F-1 Registration Statement, in accordance with Securities Act requirements. Form F-1 requires detailed disclosures about the Foreign Private Issuer’s business operations and financials. This is the form covering initial public offerings and other first-time registration statements of Foreign Private Issuers. 

If the Foreign Private Issuer also qualifies as an Emerging Growth Company, there are special guidelines for completing the F-1 Registration. Qualifying as an Emerging Growth Company can bring additional benefits in many circumstances, including: 

(a)   Avoiding or deferring of some expensive Sec disclosure requirements (only if the JOBs Act applies).

(b)  Continuing communication with qualified institutional buyers and accredited investors to determine interest in potential IPO both before and after the F-1 Registration Statement is filed. 

(c)   Showing only two years of audited financial statements in the F-1 Registration statement and exemption from obtaining an auditor attestation of internal controls. 

(d)  Submitting a draft Form F-1or Form 20-F to the SEC for confidential, nonpublic review before the public filing. 

Form F-3

Form F-3 is the registration statement that Foreign Issuers use to incorporate their annual report and other reports by reference into the registration statement. Form F-3 becomes available when a Foreign Private Issuer has (1) been subject to Exchange Act reporting requirements for at least 12 months, (2) filed all required reports in a timely way, filed at least on annual report on Form 20-F, (3) not defaulted on certain payment obligations, and (4) has an aggregate worldwide public float of common stock of at least $75 million. 

 Form F-4

Form F-4 is the registration statement for business combinations and exchange offers.

 Form F-6

Form F-6 is the registration statement for American Depositary Receipts (ADR’s). An ADR is issued by a U.S bank that holds a deposit of the foreign company’s shares in relation with a foreign bank, either directly or indirectly. ADR’s evidence ownership of American Depository Shares which represent interest in a foreign company’s shares. ADR’s are subject to the Exchange Act reporting requirements unless they are exempt under Rule 12g3-2(b).  

Form 20-F 

Form 20-F is required under Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act for Foreign Private Issuers to register securities. Section 12(g) of the Exchange Act also requires that Foreign Private Issuers submit Form 20-F unless they qualify for an exemption under Rule 12g3-2(b). 

Filing annual reports with Form 20-F for Foreign Private Issuers is the equivalent of Form 10-K reports required for domestic issuers.  Like Form 10-K, Form 20-F must be filed within four months of the end of the fiscal year. However, unlike domestic issuers, Foreign Issuers do not have to file quarterly reports.