CLIENT ALERT SEC PROPOSES NEW CROWDFUNDING RULES

Similar documents
SEC Adopts Final Rules for Crowdfunding

Articles. SEC Adopts Rules to Allow Crowdfunding Beginning May 16, Alan Bickerstaff, Jeff C. Dodd and Ted Gilman December 2, 2015

SEC Approves Crowdfunding

ADVISORY Securities SEC PROPOSES RULES FOR CROWDFUNDING REGULATION CROWDFUNDING - OVERVIEW. Ineligible Companies. Eligible Investors.

THE JOBS ACT AND ITS IMPLICATIONS ON CAPITAL RAISING FOR STARTUP COMPANIES

SEC Adopts Proposed Crowdfunding Rules to Permit Online Sales of Securities: Releasing the Kraken or Unleashing the Wisdom of the Crowd?

Regulation Crowdfunding

SEC Adopts Crowdfunding Rules

CROWDFUNDING WHAT IS CROWDFUNDING?

TITLE III CROWDFUNDING

Regulation Crowdfunding

Following the Wisdom of the Crowd?

Regulation Crowdfunding Outline

This title may be cited as the Capital Raising Online While Deterring Fraud and Unethical Non-Disclosure Act of 2012 or the CROWDFUND Act of 2012.

Securities Regulation Update

So You Want to be a Funding Portal? Here s what you need to know about the SEC s Regulation Crowdfunding.

SEC adopts final rules for securities crowdfunding under Title III of the JOBS Act

SEC Proposals For Securities Crowdfunding Under Title III of the JOBS Act

Regulation Crowdfunding

SEC Adopts Regulation Crowdfunding to Facilitate Early Capital Raises

September 23, Michael Semmann Executive Vice President/Chief Operations Officer Wisconsin Bankers Association

A Guide to Crowdfunding for Companies Seeking to Raise Capital

Applications and Problem Areas of New NJ Crowdfunding Law

Broker-Dealer Considerations: When Website Operators Should be Registered and a Discussion of the Sale of Securities over the Internet

Second Wave of States Address Crowdfunding

So You Want to Be a Crowdfunding Portal? Top 10 Traps for the Unwary

Defining Issues. SEC Permits Crowdfunding and Proposes Rules for Regional Securities Offerings. November 2015, No Key Facts.

Crowdfunding: What It Is and What It Isn t

SEC Regulation of Crowdfunding Intermediaries Under Title III of the JOBS Act

FINRA Annual Compliance Conference JOBS Act Panel

PERMANENT ADMINISTRATIVE RULES

law similar, see sec.gov on Securities Acts of 1933 and 1934, htm#fsl

Rule 506/Section 4(a)(6)/Regulation A comparison

One Hundred Twelfth Congress of the United States of America

Corporate Finance Alert

Institute of Management Accountants November 20, 2014 Crowdfunding and Other Capital Raising Issues

CROWDFUNDING RESOURCES

Jumpstart Our Business Startups ( JOBS ) Act

Raising EB-5 Capital: Key Securities Laws Considerations and a Compliance Roadmap

704-1: Crowdfunding Fees and Notice Filing Forms

The JOBS Act: Implications for Broker-Dealers

Prepared By: The Professional Staff of the Committee on Banking and Insurance REVISED:

Private Placement Sales

OUT OF THE QUAGMIRE: SEC ADOPTS CROWDFUNDING RULES, AND OTHER DEVELOPMENTS UNDER THE JOBS ACT

A Quick Guide To The JOBS Act

Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act

SEC Proposes Regulation to Implement JOBS Act Crowdfunding Offering Provisions

Department of Legislative Services Maryland General Assembly 2014 Session

Discussion Draft of Crowdfunding Exemption Rules: Table of Contents

U.S. Securities Law Briefing United States Adopts Major Changes to Securities Offering Rules under JOBS Act

Dodd-Frank Act Changes Affecting Private Fund Managers and Other Investment Advisers By Adam Gale and Garrett Lynam

INVEST CROWDFUND CANADA

Public Notice of Proposed Rule-Making

NY Securities Act Exemptions/ Private Placements December 2012

Invest Mississippi Crowdfunding

A BILL TO BE ENTITLED AN ACT. relating to the creation of a intrastate investment market for

Business Finance: U.S. Legal Framework and Introduction to Equity Crowdfunding Crowdfunding Pro and Contra Denver, Colorado

JOBS Act: Eases Capital Formation IPO Candidates and Private Companies

Crowdfunding: Game Changer for Small Business? Small Business Administration Office of Investment and Innovation

First Regular Session Seventieth General Assembly STATE OF COLORADO INTRODUCED

U.S. Securities Laws Overview

THE NEW FEDERAL CROWDFUNDING EXEMPTION: PROMISE UNFULFILLED. C. Steven Bradford *

Sun Life Financial Inc.

REED SMITH LLP INVESTMENT ADVISER NEWS QUARTERLY UPDATE

Best Practices for Engaging With Intermediaries. Introduction

Alert Memo. JOBS Act to Relax Rules on Securities Offerings

OSC EXEMPT MARKET REVIEW OSC STAFF CONSULTATION PAPER CONSIDERATIONS FOR NEW CAPITAL RAISING PROSPECTUS EXEMPTIONS

FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS ABOUT REGULATION S

SB Introduced by Senators Farnsworth D: Shooter; Representatives Cobb, Lawrence, Norgaard, Petersen, Thorpe, Townsend AN ACT

FS Regulatory Brief. New reporting requirements for exempt reporting advisers Some practical considerations. Who is an exempt reporting adviser?

CONTRIBUTION AGREEMENT of INCROWD ALABAMA FUND I, LLC

Registration and Regulation of Investment Advisers. Presented by Chris Salter

Division of Swap Dealer and Intermediary Oversight

o The filing and timing requirements are summarized on Exhibit A. Other Securities Law Issues

Crowdfunding in Oregon: A Review of the Proposed Regulation of Intra-State Crowdfunding.

Broker-Dealer and Capital Raising Issues for Private Equity Funds September 24, 2014 Presented by: Jay G. Baris Hillel T. Cohn

The Guide to Social Media and the Securities Laws

Securities Regulation - Statutes Quinn - Fall 2004

June 18, Dear Sirs/Mesdames:

SIl. Advaca*y: ttis y*ise of small business in g,avernment. k:-**:'g:9r-d:::::-y] Office of Advococy. January VIA ELECTRONIC SUBMISSION

FINRA-Broker Dealer Investment Banking Due Diligence

Release No ; Release No ; Release No. IC-30595; File No. S

Private Placements in Mergers and Acquisitions

SECURITIES RULES FOR PRIVATE EQUITY FINANCINGS

Alert. Client PROSKAUER ROSE LLP. Regulation of Non-U.S. Investment Advisors and Portfolio Managers Doing Business in the United States

Investment Adviser Annual and Other Compliance Matters

Re: Request for Public Comments on SEC Regulatory Initiatives Under the JOBS Act

Financial Regulation. Consultation Paper 13/13: The FCA s regulatory approach to crowdfunding (and similar activities) November 2013

NASAA Recordkeeping Requirements For Investment Advisers Model Rule 203(a)-2 Adopted 9/3/87, amended 5/3/99, 4/18/04, 9/11/05; Amended 9/11/2011

Expert Q&A on Accredited Crowdfunding

FINRA Regulation of Broker-Dealer Due Diligence in Regulation D Offerings

STATE OF FLORIDA OFFICE OF FINANCIAL REGULATION

Letters for Underwriters and Certain Other Requesting Parties

) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) )

By David Mainzer. October 2010

INSIDER TRADING AND REPORTING POLICY

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA Before the SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION

Crowdfunding Right Now: Alternatives to Title III of the JOBS Act

GLOSSARY OF TERMS Advisory Affiliate: person persons controlling controlled employees employees advisory affiliates employees employees persons

SPOTLIGHT ON. Registration Requirements and Filings for Investment Advisors and Their Employees

Transcription:

November 14, 2013 CLIENT ALERT SEC PROPOSES NEW CROWDFUNDING RULES The Securities and Exchange Commission ( SEC ) voted unanimously on October 23, 2013 to propose new rules to implement the crowdfunding provisions of Title III of the Jumpstart our Business Startups Act of 2012 (the JOBS Act ) and permit companies to offer and sell securities through crowdfunding (the Proposed Rules ). 1 Title III of the JOBS Act created an exemption so that this type of funding method--crowdfunding--could be used to offer and sell securities without requiring registration under the Securities Act of 1933, as amended (the Securities Act ). The SEC is seeking comments to the Proposed Rules, which may be submitted on or before February 3, 2014. Note: Until the Proposed Rules are adopted, the crowdfunding exemption may not be relied on. Background Crowdfunding has its origins in crowdsourcing, which is a type of participatory online activity in which a company proposes to a group of individuals the voluntary undertaking of a task (such as Wikipedia). Crowdfunding differs from crowdsourcing in that the crowd is asked to contribute capital (as opposed to labor) to the project. Early-stage crowdfunding called reward crowdfunding has been used (on websites such as Kickstarter) to generate financial support for various artistic endeavors, such as books and music recordings through small individual contributions, where the contributors received a reward, in the form of the fruits of 1 The Proposed Rules are available at http://www.sec.gov/rules/proposed/2013/33-9470.pdf. {813022.1 }

the project, such as a book or a CD. Crowdfunding, as contemplated by the JOBS Act, refers to securities crowdfunding and is a method for raising limited amounts of capital from a potentially large pool of investors over the Internet. The SEC is involved in securities crowdfunding only. Crowdfunding previously has not been available as a means to offer or sell securities because it would have triggered the application of the federal securities laws, which require that the offering or sale of securities be registered under Section 5 of the Securities Act, unless an exemption is available. Title III of the JOBS Act Title III of the JOBS Act created a new Section 4(a)(6) of the Securities Act, which exempted certain crowdfunding transactions from the registration requirements of Section 5 of the Securities Act and established the foundation for a regulatory structure that would permit smaller entities to use crowdfunding to raise capital. Title III of the JOBS Act was designed to help provide start-ups and small businesses with capital by making relatively low dollar offerings of securities less costly and to enable smaller ( non-accredited ) investors to invest in such offerings. It also created a new entity a funding portal to allow Internet-based platforms or intermediaries to facilitate the offer and sale of securities without having to register with the SEC as brokers. These measures were intended to facilitate capital raising by small businesses while providing significant investor protections, although at this juncture, it is unclear how much capital raising will be facilitated or how significant investor protection will be. Title III of the JOBS Act directed the SEC to write rules implementing the exemption. The Proposed Rules are the response to that directive. The Proposed Rules Consistent with Title III of the JOBS Act, the Proposed Rules, among other things, would limit the amount of money an issuer can raise, permit individuals to invest subject to certain thresholds, require that crowdfunding transactions be conducted through intermediaries, and require issuers to disclose certain information about their offers. Pursuant to the exemption from registration provided by new Section 4(6) of the Securities Act, the Proposed Rules would make crowdfunding available under the following conditions: the amount raised by an issuer does not exceed $1 million in a 12-month period 2 ; investments by individual investors in a 12-month period are limited to: - the greater of $2,000 or 5% of annual income or net worth, if the investor s annual income or net worth is less than $100,000 ; or 2 The calculation of a natural person s net worth would exclude the value of the primary residence of such person. These amounts are subject to adjustment for inflation at least every five years. {813022.1 } 2

- 10% of annual income or net worth, not to exceed $100,000, if the investor s annual income or net worth is $100,000 or more ; transactions are conducted through an intermediary that is a registered broker or is registered as a new type of entity called a funding portal (which does not have to register as a broker), subject to a regulatory framework that would facilitate crowdfunding transactions; issuers and intermediaries must provide certain information to investors and potential investors; and an issuer would not be able to avail itself of the Section 4(a)(6) exemption if it or its related parties were subject to certain bad actor disqualifying events 3. The crowdfunding exemption would not be available to non-u.s. companies, companies that already are SEC reporting companies, certain investment companies, companies that have failed to comply with annual reporting requirements of the Proposed Rules and companies with no business plan or whose business plan is to engage in a merger or acquisition with an unidentified company. Under the Proposed Rules, to rely on the crowdfunding exemption, issuers and intermediaries must comply with certain requirements. A summary of those requirements is set forth below. Requirements for Issuers An issuer offering or selling securities in reliance on the Section 4(a)(6) exemption must file certain specific disclosures with the SEC, provide these disclosures to investors and intermediaries, and make these disclosures available to potential investors. These disclosures, among other things, include: name, legal status, address and website of the issuer; names of the directors and officers and each person holding more than 20% of the shares of the issuer; description of the business of the issuer and the anticipated business plan of the issuer; financial statements of the issuer that, depending on the amount offered and sold during a 12-month period, are certified by the principal executive officer or reviewed or audited by an independent public accountant or auditor and accompanied by a copy of the issuer s tax return; description of the financial condition of the issuer; 3 The Proposed Rules apply the disqualification to the issuer, any director, officer or 20% beneficial owner of the issuer, any promoter connected with the issuer at the time of sale, any person paid for solicitation of purchasers in connection with sales of securities ( Compensated Solicitor ) and any director or officer of such Compensated Solicitor. {813022.1 } 3

description of the intended use of the proceeds of the target amount of the offering; target offering amount, deadline to reach the target offering amount and regular updates regarding the progress of the issuer in meeting the target offering amount; price of the securities or the method for determining the price; and description of the ownership and capital structure of the issuer. In addition to the above statutory disclosure requirements, the Proposed Rules would require an issuer, among other things, to provide: name, SEC file number and Central Registration Depository Number ( CRD ) number (as applicable) of the intermediary; disclosure of any compensation paid to the intermediary; certain legends to be included in the offering statement; number of employees of the issuer; discussion of risk factors; material terms of any indebtedness of the issuer; disclosure of exempt offerings conducted within the past three years; and disclosure of certain related-party transactions. Issuers that have made crowdfunding offerings would have certain ongoing disclosure requirements. Among other things, these issuers would be required to amend their offering documents to reflect material changes and provide updates on their progress toward reaching their target offering amount. These issuers would also be required to file an annual report with the SEC and to provide it to its investors. Issuers would not be allowed to advertise the terms of their offerings but could provide a notice containing limited information that directs potential investors to the intermediaries (brokers or funding portals). Requirements for Intermediaries Offerings under the crowdfunding exemption can only be made online through an intermediary that is registered with the SEC as a broker or as a funding portal and registered with an appropriate national securities association (e.g., FINRA). The intermediary and its directors, officers and partners cannot have a financial interest in the issuer. The Proposed Rules, among other things, would require intermediaries to: provide investors with educational materials; take measures to reduce the risk of fraud; make available information about the issuer and the offering at least 21 days before any securities are sold; take measures to ensure that investors understand and acknowledge the risks associated with an investment; {813022.1 } 4

take measures to ensure that investors do not exceed their investment limitations; provide communication channels to permit discussions between investors and the issuer and among investors about offerings or its platform; and facilitate the offer and sale of crowdfund securities. Under the Proposed Rules, funding portals, among other things, may not: offer investment advice or recommendations; solicit purchases, sales or offers to buy the securities offered or displayed on its platform or portal (website); compensate employees, agents or other person for solicitation of the purchase or sale of securities or its platform; hold, manage, possess or otherwise handle investor funds or securities; and engage in such other activities as the SEC, by rule, determines appropriate. The Proposed Rules provide a non-exclusive safe harbor from broker-dealer registration for funding portals that comply with the foregoing restrictions. Consistent with these restrictions, under the Proposed Rules, a funding portal, among other things, may: limit offerings available on its platform based on criteria that it applies consistently; highlight and display offerings on its platform; provide communication channels among investors, prospective investors and issuers; provide search functions on the platform; advise issuers on the structure and content of offerings; compensate others for referring persons to the funding portal and for other services; pay, offer to pay compensation to or receive compensation from a registered broker or dealer for services, provided such compensation is permitted under the Proposed Rules and not prohibited by FINRA rules; and advertise the existence of the funding portal. In addition, a funding portal may accept investment commitments, direct investors where to transmit funds, and direct a qualified third party to release proceeds to an issuer upon completion of an offering or return proceeds to an investor in the event an investment commitment or offering is cancelled. A funding portal may also deny access to or cancel an offering on its platform if it believes the offering presents a potential for fraud. Liability to Investors An issuer will be liable to an investor in a crowdfunding transaction if the issuer makes an untrue statement of a material fact or omits to state a material fact, provided the investor did not know of the untruth or omission, and the issuer did not know, and in the exercise of reasonable care could not have known, of the untruth or omission. For purposes of liability, an issuer includes any person who offers or sells the security in such offering. Therefore, on the {813022.1 } 5

basis of this definition, the Proposed Rules state that it appears likely that intermediaries would be considered issuers for purpose of this liability provision. Under this liability provision, an investor who purchases securities in a crowdfunding transaction may bring an action against the issuer to recover the consideration paid for the security, with interest, or damages if the person no longer holds the security. Miscellaneous Under the Proposed Rules: Securities purchased in a crowdfunding transaction cannot be resold for a period of one year (except to the issuer, to an accreditor investor, as part of an SEC registered offering, or to a family member of the purchaser in connection with certain events, such as death or divorce); Holders of securities purchased in a crowdfunding transaction would not count toward the threshold number of shareholders that requires an issuer to register with the SEC under Section 12(g) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. (The JOBS Act raised this threshold from 500 to 2,000 shareholders). FINRA has also proposed rules for funding portals and broker-dealers that participate in crowdfund offerings. Conclusion The Proposed Rules reflect an attempt by the SEC to strike a balance between facilitating capital formation and making crowdfunding accessible to smaller issuers and smaller investors, and protecting investors from fraud. The Proposed Rules impose substantial requirements on issuers and intermediaries to maintain this balance. Crowdfunding presents new opportunities and new concomitant regulations on participants in crowdfunding transactions. However, despite the best intentions of lawmakers to create the perfect balance between facilitating capital raising and protecting investors, concerns exist. Among other things, there are concerns about the high rate of failure of new ventures, the inability of small investors to properly diversify their investments and the lack of oversight over the small businesses of the issuers, making it fertile ground for fraud. {813022.1 } 6

Please contact the undersigned or your regular Warshaw Burstein attorney to discuss any questions you may have about crowdfunding, in particular, on the issuer side, whether it is a viable option for you and your business, and on the investor side, whether it makes sense for you or your company to invest in a crowdfunding opportunity. These are issues you should begin thinking about at this time. As mentioned earlier, the crowdfunding exemption may not be relied on until the Proposed Rules are adopted, and the comment period continues to February 3, 2014.. Frederick R. Cummings, Jr. fcummings@wbcsk.com (212) 984-7807 Marshall N. Lester mlester@wbcsk.com (212) 984-7849 Paul A. Lieberman mlieberman@wbcsk.com (212) 984-7806 Stephen W. Semian ssemian@wbcsk.com (212) 984-7764 Kyle A. Taylor ktaylor@wbcsk.com (212) 984-7797 Meryl E. Wiener mwiener@wbcsk.com (212) 984-7731 Warshaw Burstein, LLP Warshaw Burstein, LLP, 2013. All rights reserved. This memorandum was prepared as a service to clients and other friends of Warshaw Burstein to report on recent developments that may be of interest to them. The information in it is therefore general, and should not be considered or relied on as legal advice. Throughout this memorandum, "Warshaw Burstein" and the "firm" refer to Warshaw Burstein, LLP. {813022.1 } 7