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On 9 December 2020 ASX published an updated version of Guidance Note 8 in which it has clarified its position on earnings surprises and further emphasised that if a transaction is sufficiently material to warrant disclosure under ASX Listing Rule 3.1, the identity of the other party or parties will generally itself be material information that must also be disclosed.
In the updates to the Guidance Note, ASX has clarified its position on “earnings surprises”. As was the case previously, an earnings surprise will need to be disclosed to the market if it is market sensitive. That is, if it is of such a magnitude that a reasonable person would expect the information about the earnings surprise to have a material effect on the price or value of the company’s securities.
ASX has clarified that:
ASX also noted that this is guidance only and the mere fact that a company may expect its actual or projected earnings to differ from market expectations by more or less than these particular percentages will not necessarily mean that information about the difference is or is not market sensitive (and where companies publish guidance, is or is not misleading).
Particular care needs to be taken in relation to “negative” earnings surprises, in light of recent class action litigation for continuous disclosure breaches. The practical application of the guidance above is more difficult in real time where updates and expectations in relation to actual or projected earnings can develop iteratively and crystallise over a period of time. The importance of closely monitoring this sort of dynamic was clearly demonstrated in TPT Patrol Pty Ltd as trustee for Amies Superannuation Fund v Myer Holdings Limited [2019] FCA 1747. In that case the Court undertook a forensic analysis of the inner workings of Myer’s Management and Board leading up to a negative earnings update to identify the precise point at which Myer had formed the opinion that previous ‘guidance’ was going to be materially missed, which was earlier than the point of announcement and a breach of Myer’s continuous disclosure obligations was found.
ASX also made changes to Guidance Note 8 to note the recent decision in ASIC v Big Star Energy Limited (No 3) [2020] FCA 1442. In that case, the Federal Court held that a listed entity breached the continuous disclosure obligations in the ASX Listing Rules and the Corporations Act by announcing the sale of a significant asset without disclosing: (a) the identity of the purchaser; (b) that the entity had done no due diligence to verify the capacity of the purchaser to complete the purchase; and (c) that the entity had in fact been informed by the purchaser that it had not yet received all funding approvals required to complete the purchase. The transaction ultimately failed to complete. Just because the purchase was for cash consideration did not mean the identity of the purchaser was not material. It was also not an acceptable reason that the purchaser would not engage if its identity were to be disclosed.
Disclosure of these features was already recommended by ASX Guidance Note 8 and this confirms ASX’s position we wrote about in May 2019 about the store ASX puts in disclosure of the identity of the other party to a transaction2.
The contents of this publication are for reference purposes only and may not be current as at the date of accessing this publication. They do not constitute legal advice and should not be relied upon as such. Specific legal advice about your specific circumstances should always be sought separately before taking any action based on this publication.
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