21.01.2013
On January 2, the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) filed its brief in the lawsuit brought by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce, the American Petroleum Institute (“API”), the National Foreign Trade Council, and the International Petroleum Association of America that seeks to alter or overturn the SEC’s final extractive industry transparency rule.
The petitioners’ lawsuit made several key arguments, including the claims that:
The SEC’s brief addresses each of these claims, as summarized below.
The SEC’s brief states that it did not act arbitrarily or capriciously when it rejected the three rule modifications that the petitioners sought.
The SEC has been perceived to be particularly vulnerable to the petitioners’ attack on its analysis of the rule’s economic impact. The SEC claims, however, that its economic analysis was sufficient because precedent only requires it to do the “best it can.” The brief argues that the SEC met this standard by using all available data.
The SEC’s brief also notes that companies had provided little information regarding costs during the rulemaking process despite the SEC’s requests for such data, and moreover emphasizes that the SEC’s cost analysis was in keeping with the limited figures that the API submitted during the rulemaking process. Additionally, the brief claims that the SEC’s identification of the benefits of the rule, although only qualitative in nature, was adequate because it was impossible to quantify such benefits due to a dearth of data.
The petitioners argued that the final rule compelled speech in violation of the First Amendment. The SEC’s brief posits, however, that the petitioners waived their right to challenge the final rule as violating the First Amendment because petitioners had not raised this issue during the rulemaking. The brief adds that, in any case, the rule only requires factual disclosures, and therefore does not compel speech protected by the First Amendment.
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