On April 8, 2020, SEC Chair Jay Clayton and Corp Fin Director Bill Hinman put out an unusual and very important Public Statement titled “The Importance of Disclosure.”  The Statement focuses on the upcoming round of earnings releases and analyst/investor calls and places great emphasis on the need for forward-looking information.  Acknowledging the significant adverse impact of COVID-19 on corporate performance and the challenges to be faced going forward, as well as constraints on resources due to the pandemic, the Statement urges public companies to consider the following:

  • Disclosures need to reflect “(1) where the company stands today, operationally and financially, (2) how the company’s COVID-19 response, including its efforts to protect the health and well-being of its workforce and its customers, is progressing, and (3) how its operations and financial condition may change as all our efforts to fight COVID-19 progress.” Most significantly, the Statement points out that “[h]istorical information may be relatively less significant.”
  • Providing disclosure about future operations and resource needs is “challenging” but “important on many levels.”
  • Companies that “respond to our call for forward-looking information should note that we would not expect good faith attempts to provide appropriately framed forward-looking information to be second guessed by the SEC.”

The Statement discusses the upcoming issuance of Q1 earnings reports and investor/analyst calls, noting that they “will not be routine.”  Companies will need to prepare for these releases and calls more carefully than ever, despite resource constraints.  Clayton and Hinman “urge our public companies…to provide as much information as is practicable regarding their current operating status and their future operating plans”, and while recognizing that preparing forward-looking information can be challenging, they “encourage companies…to make all reasonable efforts to convey meaningful information…that provides…a level of insight that allows [investors] to see the key operational and financial considerations and challenges the company faces through the eyes of management.”

If you have any questions, please contact Gunster Securities Law and Corporate Governance practice leader Bob Lamm.

Yes! Please sign me up to receive email alerts from other Gunster practice areas.

This publication is for general information only. It is not legal advice, and legal counsel should be contacted before any action is taken that might be influenced by this publication.

About Gunster

Gunster, Florida’s law firm for business, provides full-service legal counsel to leading organizations and individuals from its 13 offices statewide. Established in 1925, the firm has expanded, diversified and evolved, but always with a singular focus: Florida and its clients’ stake in it. A magnet for business-savvy attorneys who embrace collaboration for the greatest advantage of clients, Gunster’s growth has not been at the expense of personalized service but because of it. The firm serves clients from its offices in Boca Raton, Fort Lauderdale, Jacksonville, Miami, Naples, Orlando, Palm Beach, Stuart, Tallahassee, Tampa Bayshore, Tampa Downtown, Vero Beach, and its headquarters in West Palm Beach. With more than 280 attorneys and consultants, and over 290 committed professional staff, Gunster is ranked among the National Law Journal’s list of the 500 largest law firms and has been recognized as one of the Top 100 Diverse Law Firms by Law360. More information about its practice areas, offices and insider’s view newsletters is available at www.gunster.com.

Close


Find a Professional

by Name


by Practice/Office