What is SEC Form 15-12B

SEC Form 15-12B is a certification of termination of registration of a class of security under Section 12(g) or notice of suspension of duty to file reports pursuant to Section 13 and 15(d) of the 1934 Securities Exchange Act Section 12(b).

BREAKING DOWN SEC Form 15-12B

Under Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act, when an issuer files to register their security with the SEC, they must provide pertinent financial data. This data may include information on the corporate structure and management compensation along with the balance sheets and profit/loss statements from the past three years. When a company files Form 15, or goes dark, it can suspend these reporting obligations as long as it does not have more than 300 shareholders of the deregistered class of securities on the first day of any fiscal year after it has filed Form 15. SEC Form 15-12B is filed by companies with a Commission File Number prefix of 001-.

Why Companies Go Dark

Companies go dark, or voluntarily delist and deregister under the Securities and Exchange Act of 1934, when the costs of remaining a public reporting company and staying listed on the national securities exchange outweigh its benefits. For example, during the Great Recession of 2008-2009, many smaller publically-traded companies went dark, or considered going dark, in response to the increasing financial burden of remaining a public reporting company. For smaller companies especially, the costs of keeping up with listing requirements and public reporting requirements can become a burden during difficult financial times. Delisting and deregistering allows a struggling company to redirect its dwindling resources away from SEC reporting and listing requirements.

Delisting alone does not relieve a company of its public reporting requirements; it must also deregister its shares as required by the Exchange Act. A non-listed company may have reporting obligations to the SEC. Often, a company may undergo a going private transaction, in which it cashes out most or all of its public shares in order to begin the process of going dark. Going private can occur via merger, a reverse split of the company’s shares, or a tender offer.

A company that goes dark does not need to cash out its shareholders, and indeed, many such companies do not have the liquid funds to do so. Nor does such a company need to first put the matter to a shareholder vote or provide for a fairness opinion. However, some companies may provide shareholders with a stock repurchase, tender offer or other offer of liquidity.