On September 21, 2023 the Canadian Securities Administrators (CSA) published for comment proposed amendments to National Instrument 44-102 Shelf Distributions, and related consequential amendments to certain rules and policies, to permanently implement an expedited base shelf prospectus regime for “well-known seasoned issuers” (WKSIs) in Canada, making it faster and more efficient for these issuers to raise capital. The comment period expires on December 20, 2023.
In response to stakeholder feedback that included a recommendation for the CSA to implement a “Canadian version” of the WKSI regime that exists in the United States, in December 2021 the CSA adopted a Canadian WKSI regime on a temporary pilot basis through a series of interim orders that were substantially harmonized across the country (the Blanket Orders).
Since the Blanket Orders came into effect, the CSA has continued to evaluate the appropriateness of the eligibility criteria and certain other conditions, consider stakeholder feedback and determine how to best implement a more permanent Canadian WKSI regime through rule amendments. The Blanket Orders remain in effect and will be replaced by the proposed amendments, if adopted.
The proposed amendments define a WKSI as an issuer that either has outstanding listed equity securities (excluding securities held by affiliates and reporting insiders) with a market value of at least $500 million or at least $1 billion aggregate amount of non-convertible debt securities distributed under a prospectus in primary offerings for cash in the last three years. To be eligible, an issuer must be, and have been, a reporting issuer in at least one Canadian jurisdiction for the preceding three years and must meet the definition of a WKSI as of a date within 60 days preceding the date it files the WKSI base shelf prospectus.
Issuers with mining operations must meet additional financial criteria—they must have gross revenue derived from mining operations of at least $55 million for the most recently completed financial year and gross revenue derived from mining operations of at least $165 million in the aggregate for the issuer’s three most recently completed financial years.
In addition to the criteria described above, under the proposed amendments, an issuer must satisfy several other requirements to file a WKSI base shelf prospectus, including requirements related to short-form prospectus eligibility, and being current with respect to all periodic and timely disclosure documents.
Under the proposed amendments, a WKSI base shelf prospectus would become immediately effective upon filing and would generally remain in effect for 37 months from the date of filing. Issuers would, however, be required to publicly reconfirm their WKSI-eligibility status on an annual basis in order to continue using their WKSI base shelf prospectus.
An issuer whose operations have ceased or whose principal assets are cash, cash equivalents or its exchange listing (e.g., a capital pool company, a special purpose acquisition company or a growth acquisition corporation), an issuer with outstanding asset-backed securities and/or an issuer that has been bankrupt, subject to penalties or sanctions under securities legislation, or subject to a cease-trade order, are ineligible to file a WKSI base shelf prospectus.
The principal differences between the current Blanket Orders and the proposed amendments include:
We expect that the proposed amendments will be a welcome development for the Canadian capital markets as they will provide eligible issuers with more flexibility in structuring base shelf prospectus offerings; provide improved certainty regarding transaction timing; streamline the disclosure requirements for base shelf prospectuses; and reduce costs and unnecessary regulatory burden for seasoned issuers and investment dealers.
Conversely, the WKSI eligibility requirements under the proposed amendments are more stringent than under the Blanket Orders and will take into account certain settlement agreements and regulatory proceedings outside of Canada, in addition to annual re-qualification confirmations. As such, it will be critical under the proposed amendments for issuers to ensure their continued eligibility to distribute securities under their WKSI base shelf prospectuses filed under the proposed amendments. We question whether this change from the approach taken in the Blanket Orders is necessary for matters that do not go to an issuer’s fundamental stability or creditworthiness, and thereby disqualify the issuer from maintaining its WKSI eligibility status after a base shelf prospectus has been filed—particularly in light of the damaging non-compliance consequences that could ensue.
From a cross-border perspective, the proposed amendments will more closely align the Canadian securities regulatory rules with those in the United States, where an established WKSI regime already exists. Canadian issuers filing with the SEC under the MJDS, however, would be subject to only the Canadian WKSI regime, as described above. This would permit MJDS issuers to conduct a public offering as a shelf takedown in both the United States and Canada following the filing of the Canadian WKSI base shelf prospectus and the corresponding MJDS registration statement. This alignment is expected to allow MJDS issuers that meet the WKSI eligibility criteria in Canada to conduct cross-border offerings more efficiently.
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