CLS Blue Sky Blog

How the SEC Should Harmonize Private Securities Offering Exemptions

The Securities and Exchange Commission requested public comment on ways to simplify, improve, or harmonize exemptions from the requirement to register securities offerings.  The SEC acknowledged that the current array of exempt offerings is complex and might be difficult for issuers to navigate.  See Concept Release on Harmonization of Securities Offering Exemptions, 84 Fed. Reg. 30,460 (June 26, 2019).

My comment proposed a new exemption from the registration requirements to replace several of the current exemptions and simplify access to capital for startup companies and small to mid-sized companies.  It would combine features from Rules 506(b) and (c) of Regulation D and eliminate costly and cumbersome limitations and restrictions that are part of current exemptions for smaller companies, particularly Regulation A, Regulation CF, and Rule 504 of Regulation D.  The approach also would broaden the base for sources of capital by eliminating the accredited investor restriction in Rule 506, but it would preserve fundamental investor protection by requiring a set of mandatory disclosures in each sale.

The reasons for proposing a new exemption are these:

The solution is not to amend the definition of accredited investors.  The solution is to require delivery of a solid disclosure document in a private offering and eliminate the category of accredited investors.  That is the central element of the proposed exemption, but an important qualification is that the disclosures must not be as extensive as those mandated by Regulation S-K, Form S-1, Rule 506(b) for nonaccredited investors, or Regulation A.  The disclosure obligations of the new exemption should provide essential company and security information to buyers but avoid the high costs associated with longer disclosures.  The test should be the basic information that any investor would require before investing.

Requiring a disclosure document would allow any investor to buy under the new exemption but would impose a compliance cost.  Three factors justify the cost.  First, disclosure is the essence of the approach of the federal securities laws, and Rule 506 has strayed too far from that core value.  Second, the proposed disclosures would be significantly reduced from the disclosures required for a registered offer or other exemptions.  The cost of preparing the envisioned disclosure document is meant to be manageable for startup and small companies.  Third, under current practice, some form of disclosure document is usually part of a Rule 506 offering to accredited investors.

The proposed exemption has many more details.  In general, the exemption would have very few restrictions and limitations.  The intent would be to offer a simple, streamlined, and flexible method of raising capital to a broad range of issuers and all potential investors based on delivery of a reasonable but not unduly costly set of disclosures.

This post comes to us from Andrew Vollmer, a senior affiliated scholar at the Mercatus Center at George Mason University, a former professor at the University of Virginia School of Law, and a former deputy general counsel of the Securities and Exchange Commission.  The complete version of his submission to the SEC is available here.

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