I have noticed quite a bit of confusion in blogs when discussing
crowdfunding, the JOBS Act, and other recent legislation regarding small
business, startups, and emerging growth companies. Even respected news
organizations don't get the specifics exactly right about what this
legislation actually says, so I thought I would set the record straight.
President
Obama is set to sign H.R. 3606 this week. The best way to know exactly
what this bill says is to read it, despite the somewhat dense language
and references to other parts of U.S. law. Here is a link to the actual PDF format of H.R. 3606. For an overview and summary of this bill and its history you can read here.
These are links directly to the information provided by Congress. Some
of the confusion has been that the legislative process involves a very
confusing system where bills are introduced, amended, and sometimes
added to existing bills. That was the case with the JOBS Act and the
crowdfunding provisions. H.R. 2930 was the original crowdfunding bill
that passed the U.S. House and went to the Senate, but did not actually
pass the Senate. After adding and deleting portions from various
amended versions similar to H.R. 2930, the crowdfunding and other
provisions were all put into one bill called H.R. 3606. This passed the
Senate and then went back to the U.S. House after amendments to be
passed. It has passed and was forwarded to the President for signature
on March 27, 2012. He is expected to sign it this week.
Title I of the bill implements reduced reporting and other limited disclosure requirements for emerging growth companies
(those with under $1 billion in gross annual revenue and haven't hit
the other limitations to take them out of this classification). It also
sets out changes to Regulation S-K and actions to be taken by the SEC
within 180 days to ease the burden on these small to middle market
companies to register or comply with SEC rules.
Title II provides the ability to use general advertising and solicitation by companies of investors if they are relying upon a Reg D Rule 506 exemption
for that issuance of securities, but all investors must be accredited.
Rule 506 previously allowed large private fundraising by companies, but
the investor would need to meet the definition of accredited investor
or what is referred to as a sophisticated investor if they were not
accredited (See recent amendment to Accredited Investor definition).
Now, the company can still raise money through non-accredited
sophisticated investors; however, if they do this, they cannot use
general advertising or solicitation.
Title III discusses crowdfunding,
defines it, and places certain requirements on the issuer (company
issuing the security in exchange for funding) and any intermediary used
to assist in the fund raising process, also called a "funding portal."
Also of note, the funding portal has requirements regarding registering
with the SEC and they cannot compensate a so-called finder for bring the
investors to the funding portal. Many people refer to the example of
Kickstarter, but with the change that now the website would sell stock
instead of a "pledge" or gift to large numbers of investors with small
investments each.
Title IV amends Section 3(b) of
the Securities Act of 1933 (also discussed in SEC Regulation A) to
provide a different amount for certain exempt offerings of securities.
It previously said the aggregate of such offering could go to $5
million and now is amended to go up to $50 million. They may be sold
publicly and interest can be solicited prior to filing an offering
statement. Now the SEC is given authority to implement new rules to
protect investors and companies must follow certain guidelines and
procedures, so we will have to wait to see exactly what these new
exemptions may mean for issuers.
Title V provides
an amendment for the test to determine when a company crosses the line
to be required to comply with reporting obligations with the SEC.
Previously, once the company hit 500 shareholders and assets over $10
million, they had to start complying. Now that threshold is increased
to either when the company hits 2,000 shareholders or 500 un-accredited
shareholders. It exempts from the calculation employees who received
stock pursuant to an employee compensation plan. Title VI also discusses amendments related to this same topic.
Title VII
is a somewhat vague brief provision that simply tells the SEC to
provide an online forum for information and discussion related to small
and medium business and certain other classes of businesses.
With
all the fervor around crowdfunding, I wanted to be sure people had the
actual bill to read so they didn't start giving incorrect information.
You may also see other references to H.R.572, S.1933, S.1970, S.2190,
H.R. 2940 which were related bills and ended up being incorporated in
some form into HR 3606.
No comments:
Post a Comment