European Cos. Exit U.S. Exchanges
Published by claudia April 25th, 2007 in News, SOX, Section 404, Europe, Company News, Accounting rules, Sarbox Tags: european companies, henry paulson, initial public offerings, nasdaq, new york stock exchange, nyse, sarbanes oxley act, stock exchanges, stock listings, telekom austria ag, vernalis plc.Telekom Austria, Vernalis Plan to Delist From U.S. Exchanges
European companies are already signaling their intent to take advantage of a pending change in rules that will let them easily cancel U.S. stock listings and escape the regulatory constraints of the Securities and Exchange Commission and the Sarbanes-Oxley Act.
Telekom Austria AG and Vernalis PLC, a small Great Britain-based pharmaceuticals company, Tuesday said they plan to delist and deregister from U.S. markets when the rules change on June 4, saying the cost of listing outweighs any benefit. Earlier this month, European staffing giant Adecco SA announced similar plans.
Telekom Austria is listed on the New York Stock Exchange; Vernalis trades on Nasdaq. Both also trade in their respective home countries.
The moves come as U.S. financial officials, including Treasury Secretary Henry Paulson, grapple with what they see as the shrinking competitiveness of U.S. financial markets. Other stock exchanges, particularly in London and Hong Kong, are winning initial public offerings that previously might have gone to the NYSE or Nasdaq.
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