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SEC Struggles Over How To Shed Light On Companies That Use African 'Conflict Minerals'

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First Posted: 10/16/11 01:01 PM ET Updated: 12/16/11 05:12 AM ET

WASHINGTON (Sarah N. Lynch) - Securities regulators are struggling to craft a rule that sheds light on companies that use certain African "conflict minerals" but avoids a compliance nightmare that hurts manufacturers.

The Securities and Exchange Commission is six months behind schedule in finalizing the rule that is required by last year's Dodd-Frank financial oversight law.

The rule, which was tucked into the legislation at the last minute, will require companies to disclose whether they use tantalum, tin, gold or tungsten from the war-torn Democratic Republic of the Congo.

The agency is holding a roundtable discussion on Tuesday to hear from companies, human rights organizations and other stakeholders. The SEC has asked for help navigating the mine field of tricky issues such as tracking conflict minerals through the supply chain and "workable" due diligence.

Corporations such as AT&T (T.N) have criticized the rule as overreaching.

They say it could trip up companies who contract with manufacturers and have little, if any, control or knowledge about the origins of minor amounts of minerals that end up in their products.

Fear about running afoul of the pending reporting rule has already prompted some companies such as Apple Inc (AAPL.O) and Hewlett-Packard Inc (HPQ.N) to stop sourcing from the region.

"If you go from compliance on through, this starts to set up not only nightmare scenarios, but also costly scenarios that make it difficult for companies to ensure an adequate supply of raw materials," said Tom Quaadman, the vice president of the Chamber of Commerce's Center for Capital Markets Competitiveness.

The SEC issued a draft proposal of the rule in December and hopes to finalize it by the end of the year, according to the agency's website.

The challenges of implementing the rule are many.

For a start, companies will need to identify whether or not any of the four "conflict minerals" are contained in their products - something that is not always known.

Then, if the mineral is present in the manufactured good, the company would have to exercise due diligence to determine where the metal came from. That could mean going through layers upon layers of suppliers, some of whom may be private companies located in third-world countries.

And if the metal has been recycled, as gold often is, it could get even trickier to track.

"What would be required here is the development of a global compliance infrastructure," said Brian Cartwright, a senior adviser at Latham & Watkins and former general counsel for the SEC.

"The notion is that any public company in the United States will have to file, in annual reports, as an exhibit, a conflict minerals report that has been subject to an independent private sector audit," said Cartwright.

Many companies, business groups and lawyers have urged the SEC to phase in the new rules over time to help make it easier to comply. They also want the SEC to narrow the scope of the rule so that companies are not forced to track trace amounts of minerals.

But human rights groups are staunchly opposed to a phase-in period, saying the SEC needs to follow the Dodd-Frank mandate and implement the rule without delay. Because the conflict minerals rule is required by the law, the SEC has little wiggle room to stray from congressional intent.

"Businesses should be held accountable for human rights issues, and investors find these concerns to be material in that they, at the end of the day, affect companies' image and bottom line," said Amol Mehra, the coordinator of the International Corporate Accountability Roundtable. "All companies need to do... is simply tell us what is in their products."

The SEC must also deal with potential legal challenges to the final rule.

The Chamber of Commerce, which in July successfully convinced a federal court to overturn the SEC's proxy access rule, has its sights on a possible challenge of the conflict minerals rule if the agency does not improve its cost estimates.

The agency's proposal had initially estimated the total paperwork burden of compliance would be $71 million. But the Chamber says that figure is woefully inadequate.

The National Association of Manufacturers, a leading trade group fighting the proposal, has estimated the conflict minerals plan could cost industry between $9 to $16 billion to implement.

(Reporting by Sarah N. Lynch; Editing by Tim Dobbyn)

Copyright 2011 Thomson Reuters. Click for Restrictions.

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WASHINGTON (Sarah N. Lynch) - Securities regulators are struggling to craft a rule that sheds light on companies that use certain African "conflict minerals" but avoids a compliance nightmare tha...
WASHINGTON (Sarah N. Lynch) - Securities regulators are struggling to craft a rule that sheds light on companies that use certain African "conflict minerals" but avoids a compliance nightmare tha...
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kamact
Market Observer
12:51 AM on 10/18/2011
SEC is alround conflicted,...
05:53 PM on 10/17/2011
Given that over 6 million people have died in the mineral wars in central Africa during the past decade, some control of 'conflict minerals' is appropriate.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
10:20 AM on 10/17/2011
To make it short, US corporations and the Chamber of Commerce is openly condoning slavery ! So this means business at all cost, even if a couple of 100K Africans have to die for it, who cares, certainly not the Republicans Anarcho-capitalists ! I don't want to be part of those immoral practices, fine and jail them all !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Veverka
07:40 AM on 10/17/2011
More pycho talk from the SEC. Clearly the SEC is complictic in protecting those parties envolved in conflict materials. Disclosure is either a yes or no. What to do about those companies is also clear they should stop being a cause for the conflict. World resources are not the properity of the world. They are national resources of the region in which they are found. The idea that a nations resources can be stolen fron a country is a world crime and it is not surprising to see the name ATT in the mix. Until the Congo has a legit gov and it speaks for the people of the country then those resources should be outlawed.The difference is one there we promote conflict or one were we promote peace. We have too long use our national appitite for natural resoures and money to promote war.
05:28 AM on 10/17/2011
Cleaning up wall street starts with the SEC and the rating firms. The evidence clearly shows how imcompetent both are, but bought politicians cover this up. All the laws that were produce to allow this crisis, also show these politicians were co cospiracers in the destruction of our nation. They too must answer for their actions.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kemcha
Advocate for the 99ers
10:19 PM on 10/16/2011
The SEC has nothing to do with it. It's currently illegal to either buy or sell conflict diamonds so why is the SEC protecting these companies who are dealing in them? The Kimberly Process Certification Scheme is supposed to weed out these diamonds.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
cornel
wuf wuf
10:20 AM on 10/17/2011
It's not only about diamonds !
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kemcha
Advocate for the 99ers
02:48 PM on 10/17/2011
Where, in my statement, did you see anything about me saying that?
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
kamact
Market Observer
09:06 PM on 10/16/2011
SEC has a hard time understanding anything,...
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12:54 AM on 10/17/2011
even when it's handed to them on a silver platter (cough, madoff, cough, markopolos....)
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
themodernleader
07:54 PM on 10/16/2011
  The SEC struggles with regulation because the regulators and regulated are one and the same.  The financial, corporate predators have no allegiance except their own wealth, power and glory.
   The Federal Reserve management of our financial system including our corrupted currency has virtually destroyed our economic system and form of governance.
    Any new leader has no choice to save the Republic but to cut loose our worthless currency and Federal Reserve administration and replace it with a national bank and form of "greenback currency" used in the Civil War to fund the war and reconstruction.  Any other policy will result in American serfdom and dictatorship of plutocracy and a rising China.
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edwardandersons
The Lord is my Shepard
06:41 PM on 10/16/2011
So they slipped in a bill to regulate minerals and this is allowed? THe SEC says they are worried its going to hurt manufacturers; I call BS on that comment. ITs amazing how Congress would slip through something like this when they know unemployment is high along with our economic mess...What is wrong with them? Are they trying to help us or destroy us??
Bernique
Solar is clean, cheap and plentiful
06:39 PM on 10/16/2011
How about investigating the XL Pipeline folks and the huge mining companies pillaging our small planet?
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
structurequity
structurequity not oppression
06:36 PM on 10/16/2011
All those headaches for Chamber types to surround their intellect around! Why not simply acknowledge that blood minerals need to be excluded from their products and establish the firewalls to ensure such compliance. Well respect them for it and buy their products with fidelity.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
rotorhead1871
who are you jivin' with that cosmic debris?...
06:09 PM on 10/16/2011
impossible and really a low priority....after all why cant the SEC get wall street back on the reservation??? first.......then concentrate on companies material purchases.....like later....
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Joseph Veverka
07:54 AM on 10/17/2011
They're a big org and can afford to muli-task or should be able to. The hold up really means trheu're stone walling. Or we'll do it but first one last shipment". And as far as some of you here want to continue promoting war for the sake of American jobs please open your eyes, these corp aren't creating jobs they are lining their pocket then looking for tax loop holes
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02:38 PM on 10/16/2011
#1 generator of lawyer revenue....compliance. This little doozie in Dodd Frank is a hilarious example of how broken and corrupted the gov't is. Slipping this line in the bill was a huge favor to trial lawyers. Compliance is already a huge cost to my company regarding any embargoed company, and keeps gov't enforcers employed and agencies growing.

just sad, and growth killing. Funny that the only reason any hipster may notice is that their polluting ipad prices may increase.
02:16 PM on 10/16/2011
#1 user of conflict metals is Apple. However, challenge the definition of conflict materials. The USA is the #1 killer and human rights abuser in the world. The first step is to demand the empire stop its killing and expansion.
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CB5
2012 will either make us or break us. VOTE
01:07 PM on 10/16/2011
"Businesses should be held accountable for human rights issues, and investors find these concerns to be material in that they, at the end of the day, affect companies' image and bottom line," said Amol Mehra, the coordinator of the International Corporate Accountability Roundtable. "All companies need to do... is simply tell us what is in their products."

We the People just want the facts. Thanks to Apple and HP for bowing out. Now let's hear from the rest of these companies who need to step up to the plate and tell the Truth.
02:18 PM on 10/16/2011
How about conflict oil from the military USA?
EvolveorPerish
R E anna what have you done?
05:33 PM on 10/16/2011
that's just a minor detail ; )