U.S. companies walk legal tightrope as earnings season
kicks off
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[April 15, 2020] By
Katanga Johnson
WASHINGTON (Reuters) - U.S. companies are
grappling with how best to provide guidance on their earnings outlook as
the novel coronavirus takes uncertainty to new heights and exposes them
to potential shareholder lawsuits if forecasts prove misplaced.
Measures to contain the virus have shuttered businesses, wiped nearly $5
trillion off U.S. stock markets, put 16 million Americans out of work,
and plunged the country into recession, posing unique challenges as
companies head into earnings season.
With the future clouded in doubt, the securities regulator last week
urged companies to discuss in disclosures and investor calls how their
operations and financial conditions may change as efforts to fight the
virus progress with testing and monitoring.
The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) said that by providing
broad guidance, corporate America would help paint a clearer picture of
when the country could get back to work -- a dilemma the White House is
eager to resolve as soon as possible.
That could put companies in a legally risky position, however.
"The SEC may not second guess issuers' good-faith attempts to provide
this limited information, but the plaintiffs' bar may not take the same
approach," said Christopher Bellini, chair of the private equity
practice at law firm Cozen O’Connor.
The SEC has encouraged companies to use legal safe harbors specifying
that certain statements do not violate securities law. But while those
should protect companies from an SEC penalty, they may not shield them
from investor litigation, lawyers said.
False forward-looking statements were cited in roughly half of federal
class action lawsuits over the past five years, excluding those related
to mergers and acquisitions, according to data compiled by Cornerstone
Research.
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The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission logo adorns an office
door at the SEC headquarters in Washington, June 24, 2011.
REUTERS/Jonathan Ernst
Lawyers said companies should disclose potential areas of future capital
raising, but that they were otherwise urging clients to use extra cautious
language when providing an outlook, including specifying precisely when
management is making assumptions, and weaving in additional caveats.
For example, Bruce Newsome, a lawyer at Haynes & Boon, said that for "added
cover" he was advising clients to include the following caveat: "These
projections are based on current thoughts given coronavirus restrictions, but
the extent of the risk cannot be confirmed."
Johnson & Johnson (JNJ.N), the first major U.S. drugmaker to report earnings, on
Tuesday cut its 2020 profit forecast and predicted a year-end recovery in its
medical device business, while also dedicating its cautionary note on
forward-looking statements to the spectrum of uncertainties caused by the virus.
Likewise on Tuesday, Wells Fargo & Co <WFC.N>'s CEO Charlie Scharf provided some
heavily couched guidance on future loan loss reserves, while the bank also added
the pandemic to its safe habor statement listing factors that could cause actual
results to differ from its outlook.
"Sitting here today, there are many unknowns," he told analysts.
Contrary to the SEC's request, some lawyers said that at least for the first
quarter they were encouraging clients to consider removing outlook estimates
altogether.
"It is too big a risk for issuers to provide meaningful forward-looking
statements," said Bellini.
(Reporting by Katanga Johnson; Editing by Michelle Price and Tom Brown)
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