Google Asks SEC
For Exemption
From Trading Rule
By TONY COOKE
August 25, 2006; Page A2
Search-engine company Google Inc. has piled up
so much cash that it is in danger of being mistaken for an investment
fund.
The company, which wants to diversify its investment
strategy but doesn't want to be regulated as a mutual fund, has asked
the Securities and Exchange Commission to exempt it from regulations
that can apply to a company with a lot of marketable securities on its
balance sheet.
To that end, the Mountain View, Calif., company made a
filing on July 20 to persuade the SEC that it exists not to make
investments, but to conduct an "Internet and new media business."
Google's most recent quarterly balance sheet listed
assets totaling $14.4 billion, including $4 billion in cash and $5.8
billion in marketable securities. Under the Investment Company Act of
1940, a company with more than 40% of its assets in certain types of
securities is subject to different disclosure and operating rules.
"Google states that it is not in the business of
investing, reinvesting, or trading in securities," the company told the
SEC in the filing. Google, which reported $1.47 billion in net income
for 2005, said that about 8% of that amount was investment income.
To help make its case, Google told the SEC that it will
invest only for "bona fide business purposes" and won't invest "for
short-term speculative purposes."
In the absence of an exemption, Google disclosed that
its executives are authorized to create an investment mix for the
company that ensures the 1940 investment-company law won't apply.
An SEC spokesman declined to discuss whether Google
will receive the exemption, and a Google representative didn't return a
call seeking comment.
Write to Tony Cooke at
tony.cooke@dowjones.com1
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