The Shareholders' Rights Directive introduces minimum standards to ensure that shareholders of companies whose shares are traded on an EU regulated market have timely access to the relevant information ahead of the general meeting and simple means to vote at a distance. The publication of documents on the internet as well as enabling proxy voting and electronic participation are important elements of this. The Directive also abolishes share blocking and introduces minimum standards for the rights to ask questions, put items on the general meeting agenda and table resolutions.
While nineteen Member States have already fully implemented the Directive, eight Member States (Belgium, Cyprus, Greece, Spain, France, Luxembourg, The Netherlands and Sweden) still have to implement some or all of its provisions. Incomplete implementation means that shareholders in those Member states do not enjoy the same rights as elsewhere in Europe and are denied the rights the Directive gives them when investing in publicly listed companies. The deadline for implementation was 3 August 2009".
Thursday, 24 June 2010
Europe: implementation of the Shareholder Rights Directive
The European Commission has announced that it has referred Belgium, Cyprus, Greece, Spain, France, Luxembourg, The Netherlands and Sweden to the Court of Justice for late implementation of the Shareholder Rights Directive (2007/36/EC): see here. In its press release the Commission states:
Labels:
belgium,
cyprus,
europe,
france,
greece,
luxembourg,
netherlands,
shareholder rights,
shareholder rights directive,
spain,
sweden
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