Tag Archives: Accredited investor

Accredify Offers High Net Worth Individuals an Easy Way to Invest in Private Equity Crowdfunding Investments

16 May

Universal Verification Solution streamlines the entire process with the benefit of technology making it a superior cost-effective standalone solution

By Robert Hoskins

Miami, FL  – Accredify.co has announced it has released Accredify Connect, a universal log-in and accredited investor verification tool that makes investing online simple and safe. Accredify Connect integrates easily into crowdfunding websites to make equity-based online investing possible. The service works in the same manner as Facebook Connect, where Accredify members sign in to portals to instantly qualify as an investor.

New Verification Service Announces Universal Verification Solution

New Crowdfunding Accredited Investor Verification Service Announces Universal Solution

“The landscape for investing is changing in a very big way,” said Herwig Konings, CEO of Accredify, “Thanks to the JOBS Act, private businesses can now raise funds online from professional investors and soon from the American people as well in exchange for equity.” Konings illustrates the crowdfunding phenomenon by referencing the popular ABC TV show, Shark Tank. “With the JOBS Act, anyone who qualifies can now effectively become a shark with their own money. Entrepreneurs aren’t presenting to just five sharks in a room, but to a vast online audience of anyone and everyone who has the desire and ability to invest in that idea’s success. We believe this enablement of consumer power will lead to radical increases in innovation, jobs, and to an overall healthier economy.”

“One thing we recognized as a major bottleneck in this industry was the need for a compliance solution that was simple enough to be adopted by the industry but comprehensive enough to be secure, confidential, and efficient for investors,” said Will Silverman, CFO and co-founder, “Investors should control who gets access to their information. As investment opportunities become more prevalent, investors would otherwise be forced to hand over sensitive financial information to multiple parties in order to meet compliance and pay potentially hundreds of dollars to an attorney.

Accredify streamlines the entire process with the benefit of technology making it a superior cost-effective standalone solution. It’s simple and secure to verify your financials in confidence and, once verified, you receive a certificate that can be printed for offline deals or used online through Accredify Connect, supported by the industry’s leading platforms.

What distinguishes Accredify from other service providers is its relentless focus on making the crowdfunding process better for investors. Unlike competitors who bundle their verification service with other compliance tools for issuers, Accredify’s customer are able to take back control of the verification process and easily invest online with trusted platforms. Issuers benefit from a free-to-use API and an efficient solution for verifying the high net worth status of potential investors over the Internet.

The SEC recently heard from the Investor Advisory Committee (IAC) on this matter of verification with respect to equity-based crowdfunding for the masses. At an April 10th meeting, the IAC’s Barbara Roper said “…if someone comes along and creates the technological solution… it would be expected portals move on to that system.” The IAC reasonably expects a market innovation will be the answer. “You can imagine the solution that would be developed, but it doesn’t exist.”

Thankfully, a solution DOES exist and it’s called Accredify. Konings added, “The JOBS Act is one of the most citizen-empowering pieces of legislation we’ve seen in a long time. Soon it will be easier than ever for entrepreneurs to find individuals who are ready, willing, and able to invest in startups and Accredify is on a mission to empower that vision with compelling solutions that make it possible for Americans to invest in one another to change the world.”

Accredify, LLC is a Miami-based technology company dedicated to providing independent third-party investor verifications for crowdfunding portals, private equity exchanges, broker-dealer portals, and compliant entrepreneurs seeking to raise equity capital through Rule 506(c) filings. Accredify makes investing easier by innovating the verification process for Accredited & Non-Accredited investors who are otherwise asked to repeatedly submit the same financial information again and again to confirm their status, while serving the needs of equity issuers, who are required by law to verify their investors.

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SEC Lifts Ban on General Solicitation; Implements First Phase of JOBS Act for Reg. D, Title II Accredited Investors

22 Sep

SEC Lifts 80-Year Ban on the General Solicitation of Private Placement Equity Investments


By 
Robert Hoskins

Today, the United States finally inched its way toward the full implementation of the JOBS Act passed in April 2012, required by federal law to be in place by January 2013, but still not fully realized as intended by President Obama and the both houses of the U.S. Congress.

SEC Crowdfunding Call for Comments on November 15, 2013

SEC Crowdfunding Call for Comments on November 15, 2013

“We want this new market and the private markets in general to thrive in a safe and efficient manner, and these rules we adopted and proposed are designed to facilitate that objective,” said Mary Jo White, Chairwoman of the SEC. “As we fulfill our mission to facilitate capital formation and maintain fair and efficient markets, the Commission must always focus on strong investor protections.”

Until the general solicitation ban was lifted, hedge funds, VCs, and startups had to quietly raise that money, soliciting by word of mouth and other forms of private communication. Now companies can buy ads, launch PR campaigns, leverage social media and openly announce that they’re seeking investors.

The addition of general solicitation is expected to fuel a new cottage industry of investor matching-making websites that aim to broaden the investment pool to financial stalwarts outside the stanchly protected investment circles of Silicon Valley.

“With general solicitation it will be much easier for investors to find companies they are passionate about supporting,” said Mike Norman of crowdfunding website, WeFunder. The new rule will hopefully open up the capital-starved startup market to the majority of investors. According to WeFunder’s website, only 3% of the US’s 8 million accredited investors are active in the tech startup space.

For example, leading startup investing platform, RockThePost, announced last week that its equity crowdfunding website will provide the following equity crowdfunding investment services:

  1. Prominent featuring of startups publicly announcing investment rounds
  2. Investor verification system that shifts the burden off startups
  3. Secure transactions where Escrow accounts act as a safe haven for early committed investors
  4. Full transparency – third party identity checks and legal business verification, crowdsourced due diligence, bank-level security
  5. Smart matching of investors to startup investments that match their preferences

Equity crowdfunding sites such as AngelistCircleup, CrowdfunderFundersClubRockThePost and Wefunder are important the nascent industry because according to the Center for Venture Research, only 258,000 investors have made an angel investment out of the 8.7 million accredited investor households eligible to invest in the U.S.

The general solicitation ban lift will allow startups to publicly fundraise via methods such as equity crowdfunding, harnessing the power of the internet and social media to reach potential investors in all corners of the country.

According to a Forbes article, many states have decided not to wait on the SEC. Kansas, the first state to enact laws requiring the registration of sales of securities to the general public 100 years ago, turned out to be the first in the U.S. to enact an “intrastate” Invest Kansas Exemption law. The state of Georgia passed the Invest Georgia Exemption that provides even more freedom for crowdfunding than the Kansas exemption. North Carolina’s House passed a crowdfunding bill that is expected to move to the full legislature in an updated form and be signed into law next year. The state of Washington is currently teeing up crowdfunding legislation and other states will likely follow suit.

Tanya Prive, a co-founder of RockthePost, points out that “One of the other issues I’ve seen is that there are plenty of startups with a large customer base that they cannot tap into for capital support under existing regulations. These people are the biggest fans and evangelists of the brand, who might be first in line to invest. Once the user base is able to engage with their beloved company in fundraising mode via an investment crowdfunding platform, the company will be able to capitalize on the crowd’s interest in their success and accelerate the fundraising process by converting customers into investors.”

“So although there are strings attached to the ruling, lifting the ban on general solicitation – an 80-year-old rule – will help investors connect with entrepreneurs, and vice versa. The decision also weighs in the favor of entrepreneurs and investors who live outside places like Silicon Valley, where old-school networking and personal connections are how financing deals typically happen,” said Eric Markowitz, crowdfunding reporter for Inc. Magazine. “By lifting the ban, entrepreneurs living outside traditional tech hubs may find it easier to connect with investors, raise money, and grow their start-ups without having to necessarily relocate.”

Although large players like private equity firms Bain Capital and Blackstone Group LP could take advantage of the chance to use television ad campaigns, many lawyers and regulators close to the industry have said that they expect smaller funds with fewer resources to test the new rule first.

“By allowing issuers to solicit to a broader group of potential investors, the SEC has showed its commitment to democratizing the investing process and putting an end to yesterday’s ‘old boy’ investor networks,” said Barry Silbert, founder and chief executive of SecondMarket Inc., a marketplace for private shares.

The next important date to watch for is October 31, 2013, when the 2nd wave of SEC crowdfunding guidelines are expected to be issued for Title III investors that will allow unaccredited investors to participate in private placement investments.

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More News on the SEC’s New General Solicitation Rules:

  1. SEC Lifts Ban On General Solicitation, Allowing Startups

  2. SEC Approves JOBS Act Requirement to Lift General Solicitation Ban

  3. Starting Today, Startups Can Broadcast Their Fundraising From the Rooftops

  4. The General Solicitation Ban Lift Can Change Startup Investing Forever

  5. Crowdfunding Will Flourish Regardless Of What The SEC Does

  6. Game Changer: SEC Lifts General Solicitation Ban

  7. Boon for Start-ups: SEC Lifts Ban on General Solicitation

  8. SEC lifts longtime advertising ban for hedge funds, others

  9. SEC Lifts Ban on General Solicitation in Certain Private Placements

  10. S.E.C. Lifts Advertising Ban on Private Investments

  11. SEC Votes to Ease 80-Year-Old Ban on Private-Investment Ads

  12. SEC Lifts Ban on Hedge Fund Ads

  13. SEC Lifts 80-year-Old Ban on Advertisements for Private Investors

  14. SEC lifts advertising ban on private investments: How it affects you

  15. SEC Votes to Lift Ban on Hedge Fund Advertising

RockthePost Predicts Legalization of General Solicitation Will Change Startup Investing Forever

21 Sep

The SEC general solicitation rule change washes away some limitations on promotion of fundraising campaigns that have been in place for 80 years

By Robert Hoskins

Many changes are going to take place in the startup investment industry as the SEC lifts its ban on general solicitation on Monday, September 23.  With this implementation, the startup ecosystem will see an 80-year-old securities law modified for modern times, allowing private companies – startups in particular – to publicly advertise that they are seeking investments.

Alejandro Cremades launches crowdfunding project as a solution to help save the U.S. economy.

Alejandro Cremades launches crowdfunding project as a solution to help save the U.S. economy.

Among the exciting developments, leading startup investing platform RockThePost will unveil the following, in conjunction with Title II of the JOBS Act taking effect on Monday:

  1. Prominent featuring of startups publicly announcing investment rounds
  2. Investor verification system that shifts the burden off startups
  3. Secure transactions where Escrow accounts act as a safe haven for early committed investors
  4. Full transparency – third party identity checks and legal business verification, crowdsourced due diligence, bank-level security
  5. Smart matching of investors to startup investments that match their preferences

RockThePost CEO, Alejandro Cremades, notes that “our startups have had mixed feelings on general solicitation, but the ones who are planning to take advantage of it are really excited about the exponential exposure from which they can benefit tremendously.”

According to the Center for Venture Research, only 258,000 investors have made an angel investment out of the 8.7 million accredited investor households eligible to invest in the U.S. The general solicitation ban lift will allow startups to publicly fundraise via methods such as equity crowdfunding, harnessing the power of the internet and social media to reach potential investors in all corners of the country. We expect a large jump in angel activity in the coming years as individual investors seek higher returns on investment and feel more comfortable investing in startups.

The nature of startup investing is risky, but to grow the nest egg, investor money has to be put to work. With a financial shift underway in which low yields and high interest rates are prevalent, investors are forced to look beyond traditional investment avenues to reach their financial goals.

A 2013 UBS report, Investment Strategy Guide, recommends that 7 to 11% of any given investment portfolio be allocated to new alternative investments, which includes buying equity in early stage companies (note that only accredited investors may participate in private offerings).

Startup investing involves high risk. However, investing early in startups has the potential of yielding high returns as seen below.

  • $1,000 in Facebook in 2005 = $624,500 today
  • $1,000 in Airbnb in 2009 = $589,667 today
  • $1,000 in Dropbox in 2008 = $391,500 today

RockThePost does believe that openly fundraising in the startup investing world could significantly help startups gain access to capital in an economic environment in which investors are more readily looking for high-return investments.

General solicitation will potentially increase the number of transactions happening between investors and startups. RockThePost expects these changes to drive the U.S. economy as small businesses have created almost 65% of the net new jobs for the past 17 years.

By democratizing access to startup capital for entrepreneurs and bringing startup investment opportunities to a new investor demographic, RockThePost aims to be the go-to destination for both startups and investors.

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More News on the SEC 80-Year Ban on General Solicitation:

BlazeFund Launches New Innovative Equity Crowdfunding Platform

20 Aug

Entrepreneurs Gain Alternative Online Equity Crowd Funding Platform From BlazeFund For Securing Growth Capital, Investors Gain Access To Uncorrelated Asset Class

By Robert Hoskins

BlazeFund, Inc. launched a new equity-based crowdfunding platform for accredited investors to find a portfolio of potential investment deals through an online marketplace. The user-friendly platform offers a secure environment and ecosystem that simultaneously connects individual and strategic institutional investors with start-up entrepreneurs and growing private companies.

 Entrepreneurs Gain Alternative Online Equity Crowd Funding Platform From BlazeFund For Securing Growth Capital, Investors Gain Access To Uncorrelated Asset Class


Entrepreneurs Gain Alternative Online Equity Crowd Funding Platform From BlazeFund For Securing Growth Capital, Investors Gain Access To Uncorrelated Asset Class

BlazeFund’s platform focuses on listing ventures in technology, business services and healthcare/life sciences. These companies are beyond the seed stage and have proven business models, products and markets. Most of the venture listings will target a minimum average capital raise of $0.5M.

BlazeFund is the first equity crowd funding portal with multiple international offices located in developing economic regions. As a result, start-ups and growing private companies listed on BlazeFund receive greater exposure for their listings. BlazeFund also assists companies interested in potential cross-border joint ventures.

Aaron Sanders, founder and CEO of BlazeFund, believes that the portal delivers an added value to each of the three groups – entrepreneurs, institutions and investors that are connected to the platform. “Our mission is to help extraordinary entrepreneurs find the capital they need to grow their businesses from our private network of strategic investors. The end goal is to make the overall process more efficient and transparent for both investors and companies,” states Sanders.

BlazeFund’s portal has patent-pending features that reduce investor risk by:

  • Providing a two-step investment mechanism that splits the investment exposure of the crowd and links the release of raised capital to a company achieving predetermined milestones.
  • Facilitating private-equity/venture-capital style due diligence by the crowd/analysts, enabling potential investors to access independent reviews.

With equity crowd funding growing rapidly and market size projections of $6.3B over the next five years, Sanders believes that, “Investors can easily diversify a small percentage of their portfolios through this new investment class which has the potential to produce significant returns — perhaps multiples of their original investment.”

Mr. Sanders has a BS Chem. E. (Univ. of Wisconsin, Madison) and an MBA (Univ. of Rochester). His expertise is in strategy, operations, business process, CRM and ecommerce solutions. Sanders has been granted a number of US patents and is co-inventor of BlazeFund’s patent-pending innovations.

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Crowdfunding Industry Drills Its First Oil and Gas CrowdFunding Platform in Houston

16 Aug

Accredited Investors Can Now Shop for Texas Oil and Gas Investment Opportunities in Texas on eOilBoom.com

By Robert Hoskins

eOilBoom.com, the first Oil & Gas CrowdFunding platform has officially launched at Summer NAPE in Houston, Texas. eOilBoom.com’s proprietary and patented pending platform pairs oil & gas deals with accredited investors. The entire process from the due diligence of a deal to completing the transaction will take place on eOilBoom.com’s funding platform.

Crowdfunding Industry Drills Its First Oil and Gas CrowdFunding Platform in Houston

Crowdfunding Industry Drills Its First Oil and Gas CrowdFunding Platform in Houston

“We finally have created a platform where the masses have the opportunity to invest in an alternative investment such as oil and gas instead of continuing to only invest in the traditional volatile stock market. eOilBoom.com’s oil and gas deals can potentially provide larger and more stable rewards for our investors,” says Rodney D. Giles, CEO of eOilBoom.com.

eOilBoom.com states they have been working for months with their in house development team and outside legal counsel on figuring out the right method to make this platform work correctly. Giles goes on to say, “Our platform is unique because typically an investor is only able to buy into an ownership of a holding company such as a LLC or LP, with our funding platform, our investors will have direct ownership through a working interest in a lease or through a direct mineral or royalty ownership.”

“We understand each investor has a different risk tolerance and with eOilBoom.com we provide both drilling prospects as well as long life production deals providing investor a wide variety of investment choice based on the investor’s risk profile,” says Giles.

Furthermore, eOilBoom.com choose Summer NAPE in Houston, TX, the premier oil & gas trade show to showcase its platform. eOilBoom.com is giving away a Royalty in a producing oil & gas well for anyone who registers for free at their booth.

Lead by serial entrepreneur Rodney D. Giles, eOilBoom.com is the first online Oil & Gas CrowdFunding platform that enables accredited investors to get direct access to a vast array of Oil & Gas Deals from multiple operators. eOilBoom.com has innovated a unique proprietary and patented pending platform that enables multiple buyers to purchase a single property and receive their direct proportionate share of the ownership.

CareerFuel Launches Crowdfunding Education Site For Entrepreneurs

15 Aug

On September 23, 2013, entrepreneurs will have a new way to reach accredited investors with private offerings—advertising.

By Robert Hoskins

Stemming from Title II of The JOBS Act and the recent regulations released by the SEC to support it, this is intended to make it easier for entrepreneurs to raise capital for their new businesses and create jobs in the process.

According to CareerFuel it will now be easier then ever before to raise capital for new businesses.

According to CareerFuel it will now be easier then ever before to raise capital for new businesses.

There are approximately 8.6 million accredited investors in the U.S. and they fund 3% of startups/small businesses. During 2012, an estimated 260,160 angels collectively invested $22.9 billion in 67,000 companies. An additional $26.5 billion was invested by venture capitalists in 3,698 companies. Advertising to these wealthy individuals has the potential to significantly expand the market of accredited investor small business capital.

Later this year, it is anticipated that the SEC will release the rules for Title III of The JOBS Act, enabling entrepreneurs to offer securities (debt or equity) to unaccredited investors in exchange for investment in their early-stage companies.

This new fundraising tool known as equity crowdfunding comes with a myriad of regulations that will have to be met. While potentially transformative for entrepreneurs, it is one of many ways available to raise money for new businesses. The primary options today include: personal savings, friends and family, donation crowdfunding, angel investment, venture capital and institutional investment.

To educate entrepreneurs about this exciting option—how it works, whether it is a good fit for their business and how to utilize it—CareerFuel has launched a comprehensive crowdfunding site for entrepreneurs. Free for their use and regularly updated, CareerFuel is the go-to place for the crowdfunding education “issuers” will need.

CareerFuel is one of the only sites that offers job seekers and aspiring entrepreneurs the direction, inspiration and job listings needed to find a job or start a business.

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Front Page PR Offers Broker Dealers General Solicitation Campaigns to Market the Oncoming Wave of Equity Crowdfunding Investment Opportunities to the Next Generation of U.S. Accredited Investors

15 Jul

SEC legalizes Crowdfunding marketing, PR and social media campaigns to solicit investments from Reg. D accredited investors, which include, in general, people with a net worth (excluding their residence) of $1 million, income of $200,000 a year (or $300,000 with their spouse), officers and directors of the issuer and various institutions that have more than $5 million in assets

By Robert Hoskins, Front Page Public Relations

Front Page PR announced new turnkey Crowdfunding marketing programs for FINRA-registered broker dealers that want to begin planning advertising, marketing, media relations, PR and social media campaigns to reach a target audience of accredited investors that have remained allusive for the past 30 years due to securities laws.  On July 10, 2013, the Securities Exchange Commission (SEC) voted to lift rules that strictly prohibited the use of mass marketing strategies to promote investment opportunities to potential investors.

Beginning September 2013, leading broker dealers that want to make a big push into one of the most promising financial opportunities in the last eighty years can now begin working with Front Page PR’s team of marketing experts to start planning targeted marketing campaigns to reach this lucrative new audience of prospective accredited investors.


July 10, 2013 SEC Guidelines passed for Crowdfunding and Title II of the 2012 JOBS Act:


“Aggressive broker dealers are already partnering with popular equity crowdfunding sites such as Circleup.com and MicroVentures.com in order to begin marketing to investment early adopters who are joining popular crowdfunding sites in droves,” said Robert Hoskins, Front Page PR’s Director of Media Relations.  “Adding to the crowdfunding marketing opportunity is the pent-up demand that has been building over the past five years as entrepreneurs and small businesses that have been rejected over and over when seeking traditional bank and small business loans.”

“On the flip side of the crowdfunding market opportunity are millions of qualified investors in the U.S who meet the official SEC guidelines to become accredited investors, which can participate in new equity crowdfunding opportunities, but are unaware of their unique credentials,” Hoskins continued.  “These potential investors have large sums of money sitting in their bank accounts, savings plans and 401k retirement accounts because they simply cannot find attractive deals that will provide a decent return on their investment.”

On September 2, 2013, broker dealers will be able to put together marketing campaigns to educate new investors on the potential to invest in lucrative crowdfunding investment opportunities as well as the best strategies on how to find and evaluate good deals that have serious potential as well as time proven strategies on how to identify red flags and eliminate deals that do not.

Front Page PR encourages broker dealers and equity crowdfunding platforms to contact the firm to begin planning marketing campaigns prior to September 2, 2013, the date when the race begins to build new relationships with millions of new accredited investors via mass marketing communication strategies.

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CrowdCheck Offers Crowdfunding Compliance Management for New Reg. D and Accredited Investor Marketing Programs

12 Jul
CrowdCheck CEO Sarah Hanks

CrowdCheck CEO Sarah Hanks

By Sarah Hanks, CrowdCheck’s CEO

Adoption of New Rule 506(c): General Solicitation in Regulation D Offerings

From the CEO’s Desktop:  On July 10 the SEC complied with a mandate in the JOBS Act of 2012 to permit “general solicitation” in private securities offerings. In doing so, the SEC created an entirely new type of securities offering not required to be registered under the Securities Act of 1933. The SEC also adopted rules preventing “bad actors” from participating in private offerings, and proposed for public comment changes to Regulation D and Form D under the Securities Act that are intended to increase investor protection.

Offerings of securities in the United States must be registered with the SEC under the Securities Act or made in compliance with an exemption from registration. Rule 506, part of Regulation D under the Securities Act, is the most used exemption from registration of securities in the United States. The SEC estimates that in 2012 $899 billion was raised in transactions claiming the Rule 506 exemption. New Rule 506(c) Adopted The SEC voted to adopt amendments to Regulation D under the Securities Act to add new Rule 506(c).  Rule 506(c) offerings are technically private placements, made only to “accredited” investors.[1] In the past this has meant not just that accredited investors only could buy the securities, but also that the issuer could offer them to accredited investors only. Under the new rule, small companies and private investment funds and their intermediaries will be able to use “general solicitation” to reach accredited investors, which means they may advertise or publicize an offering on television, in newspapers, and most importantly over the internet. They may talk about the offering on talk shows and webinars, and they may promote the offering on social media. In doing so, however, they will be subject to the anti-fraud provisions of the federal securities laws, which prohibit misleading statements. If the proposals discussed below are adopted, the materials used in general solicitation (which is a very broadly defined concept, including most attempts to condition market interest in an offering) will also be subject to legending requirements. The JOBS Act required the SEC to remove the prohibition on “general solicitation or general advertising,” which has been part of Regulation D since its adoption in 1982, so long as the purchasers in an offering were all accredited.  The way the SEC has implemented this legislative mandate means that there will now be two different types of offering under Regulation D’s Rule 506:

  • Traditional Rule 506(b) offerings, which cannot use general solicitation, but in which up to 35 non-accredited investors can participate so long as they are provided with extensive information about the issuer of the securities, usually in the form of a private placement memorandum or PPM; and
  • New Rule 506(c) offerings, which can use general solicitation, but must be sold to accredited investors only, in which the market will let investors dictate the type of information that they need in order to make informed investment decisions.

The JOBS Act directed the SEC to lift the prohibition on general solicitation provided that all purchasers of the securities were accredited investors and the issuer took “reasonable steps to verify” that the purchasers were accredited, “using such methods as determined by the Commission.”  In its initial proposal the SEC declined to specify even a non-exclusive list of such methods, on the grounds that this would inhibit flexibility in the markets.  However, in the final rule the SEC provided more clarity and established a principles-based method of verification that expects issuers to look at, among other things:

  • The nature of the purchaser and the type of accredited investors the purchaser claims to be;
  • The amount and type of information the issuer has about the purchaser; and
  • The nature of the offering, including the manner in which the purchaser was solicited to participate and the terms of the offering, such as the minimum investment amount.

The SEC makes clear that the issuer should look to the facts and circumstances surrounding the offer and the issuer’s relationship with the investor, and that what will be required to constitute “reasonable steps” will change based on the circumstances. For example, offerings with high minimum cash investments might require less additional investigation than offerings with lower minimums, provided there are no facts to indicate that a third party is financing the purchase. The SEC also provided a non-exclusive list of methods the issuer could use to verify that a natural person meets the accredited investor requirements of 506(c). These methods are:

  • If verifying whether a purchaser qualifies on the basis of income, the issuer may use IRS records that report income (e.g., a Form W-2, Form 1099, etc.) for the purchaser for the two most recent years, along with written representation from the purchaser that they have a reasonable expectation that they will meet the income requirement this year as well.
  • If verifying whether a purchaser qualifies on the basis of net worth, the issuer may use bank statements, brokerage statements, other statements of security holdings, certificates of deposit, tax assessments and appraisals provided by independent third parties, provided the records are no more than three months old. The issuer must also use a credit report to assess the purchaser’s liabilities. The issuer must also get written representation from the purchaser that all liabilities necessary to make a net worth determination have been disclosed.
  • The issuer may rely on written confirmation from a third party that the third party has taken reasonable steps to verify the purchaser’s accredited status. The SEC specifically named broker-dealers, CPAs, attorneys, and SEC-registered investment advisers as acceptable third parties, but also stipulated that other third parties could be acceptable provided they take reasonable steps to verify that purchasers are accredited and the issuer has a reasonable basis to rely on that verification.
  • Finally, purchasers who invested in the issuer in a previous 506(b) offering as an accredited investor and remains an investor in the issuer’s 506(c) raise is deemed to satisfy the verification requirements if the issuer obtains certification from the purchaser that they qualify as an accredited investor at the time of sale.

While the SEC provided these four methods as a non-exclusive safe-harbor, the Commission was clear that these methods would not satisfy the verification requirement if the issuer or its agent has knowledge that the purchaser is not an accredited investor. Proponents of Rule 506(c) offerings believe that they will increase transparency, make it easier for small companies to raise capital and decrease companies’ administrative costs. Opponents argue that Regulation D was already a successful capital-raising mechanism (a recent study by the SEC showed a vibrant Regulation D market raising up to a trillion dollars in over 15,000 offerings a year, mostly in offering sizes under $1 million). They also worry that, in the words of Commissioner Aguilar at the meeting at which the new rules were first proposed, removal of the prohibition on general solicitation would be “a boon to boiler room operators, Ponzi schemers, bucket shops, and garden variety fraudsters, by enabling them to cast a wider net, and making securities law enforcement much more difficult.” Rule 506(c) presents opportunities and threats. Contacting a broader range of investors will become easier, and thus more offerings can be made and more investors can enter the market.  This will combine with the opportunities already presented by the internet to present investment opportunities on a more cost-effective basis, without using an extensive (and expensive) PPM. More intermediaries may enter the market.  But as the SEC pointed out in the release proposing the rules: . . . eliminating the prohibition against general solicitation could make it easier for promoters of fraudulent schemes to reach potential investors through public solicitation and other methods not previously allowed. This could result in an increase in the level of due diligence conducted by investors in assessing proposed Rule 506(c) offerings and, in the event of fraud, would likely lead to costly lawsuits . . . This increased awareness of potential fraud may mean that companies need to do more to establish their legitimacy and that intermediaries will seek to provide meaningful due diligence to distinguish themselves from their competitors. Moreover, liability under the securities laws for misstatements, both for issuers and their intermediaries, has not changed. Any person who makes an untrue statement of a material fact, or omits to state a material fact necessary in order to make the statements that are made not misleading, violates the anti-fraud provisions of securities law. This is true whether the statement is intentional or made recklessly. It is easy to imagine how an entrepreneur might make a thoughtless or overoptimistic statement with respect to his or her company in the informal context of social media. Space-constrained media like Twitter will pose particular challenges to presenting a balanced picture of the investment opportunity. Will the rule change mean that we see hedge funds advertising on late-night TV or Twitter campaigns for investments in startups? The impact of the new rule is likely to be more limited in that respect than some have predicted. Public registered mutual funds do advertise, but those advertisements tend to be staid and contain lots of “fine print” disclaimers prescribed by law; private funds will likely be just as constrained. Broker-dealers putting together Regulation D deals are already subject to FINRA rules with respect to their advertising and social media use, and these requirements have not changed. The anti-fraud laws discussed above should have a tempering effect on any overly-exuberant publicity attempts in either paid or social media. And the SEC will be watching. The SEC has established a “Rule 506(c) Work Plan” involving staff from all across the SEC, who will monitor the new Rule 506(c) market for fraud and compliance and to coordinate with state regulators. The effective date for the new rule will be in mid-September, 2013.[2] Rule 506(c) offerings will only be legal after that effective date.  The SEC views “gun-jumping” very harshly. Proposed Changes to Regulation D, Form D and Rule 156 In the interests of investor protection, the SEC proposed the following changes:

  • Requiring the filing of a Form D in Rule 506(c) offerings at least 15 days before the issuer engages in general solicitation (an Advance Form D). Form D is currently filed no more than 15 days after the first sale of securities in a Regulation D offering.
  • Requiring a closing amendment to Form D within 30 days after the termination (final sale or abandonment) of any Rule 506 offering.
  • Expanding the content of Form D to include website address, information about controlling persons of the issuer, the issuer’s type of business, issuer size, whether the filing is an Advance Form D or a closing amendment, securities identifier, information about the type of investor, and use of proceeds. New items would be added to the form to cover number and types of accredited investor, trading venue, whether a broker-dealer filed general solicitation materials with FINRA, identity of investment adviser (for pooled investment vehicles), the types of general solicitation to be used in 506(c) offerings, and the methods to be used for determining accredited status in 506(c) offerings.
  • Requiring written general solicitation material used in Rule 506(c) offerings to include specified legends and other disclosures. Private investment funds would need to use a special legend disclosing that the investors are not provided the protection of the Investment Company Act of 1940. Failure to use the proposed legends would lead to a disqualification from future Rule 506 offerings.
  • On a temporary basis, requiring issuers to submit written general solicitation materials used in Rule 506(c) offerings to the SEC for the SEC to monitor what sort of communications are being used. The SEC will not make a formal review of these materials, and submission is not a condition to the validity of the offering but non-compliance might lead to unavailability of Rule 506 for future offerings. The materials are not formally “filed” with the SEC and will not be available to the public. Submission would be via an “intake page” on the SEC website.
  • Disqualifying an issuer from relying on Rule 506 for one year if it has not complied, within the last five years, with the Form D filing requirements in a Rule 506 offering.
  • Amending Rule 156, which interprets the anti-fraud provisions of the securities laws in connection with sales communications used by investment companies, to apply to private funds and to mandate additional manner and content restrictions on general solicitation materials used by private funds. The SEC states that private funds “should now be considering the principles underlying Rule 156 to avoid making fraudulent statements in their sales literature” and that private funds are just as much subject to the anti-fraud provisions of the law as investment companies are.

Two points that might not be evident to non-securities lawyers:

  • “Written communications” under the securities law include videos, TV appearances, webcasts, website content, Tweets, Facebook posts and recorded songs about the offering. Anything digital or broadcast. (Rule 405 under the Securities Act.)
  • “General solicitation” is very broad concept and includes any attempt to create a market for the securities being offered.

The SEC stated that it needed further consideration following experience with offerings under the new rule before imposing any content restrictions on general solicitation materials, which several commentators had urged the SEC to adopt. The additional filing requirements are not particularly burdensome, and the legending requirements would reflect best practices even if they were not proposed to be compulsory. Likewise, the changes to Rule 156 reflect the SEC’s interpretation of the law as it stands now. The temporary requirement to submit general solicitation materials could fast become unwieldy both for issuers and for the SEC itself. Current practice in online Rule 506 offerings is to use various media in presenting an investment opportunity to investors, including videos, slide decks, graphic-heavy offering memoranda, due diligence reports and other supporting data. These items are prepared in many different formats. Add to these social media postings and other solicitation items (and it is not clear in what format these are to be submitted) and the opportunity for chaos is limitless. Unless the ”intake page” uses a robust document-handling system able to handle many extremely large files in every format in which it is possible to create documents (and the intake page feeds documents to an equally robust database), failed uploads, long loading wait times and garbled data files are inevitable. The intake page is apparently going to be available for voluntary submissions by the time Rule 506(c) is effective. It is quite possible that the SEC’s experience with voluntary submissions will cause it to rethink this proposal. One striking issue in light of the combination of rules that are adopted and rules that are merely proposed is that in September, companies and funds will be able to generally solicit with fewer restrictions, and then additional restrictions (legends, slightly stricter Form D filing requirements and information submission requirements) will kick in after the proposed rule changes are adopted. The SEC also asks whether the definition of accredited investor should be changed when the SEC is permitted to make such changes, which would not be until July 2014. The proposed changes are now open for a period of public comment, which ends in mid-September. “Bad Actor” Rules Adopted The SEC also adopted its final rules disqualifying “felons and other ‘bad actors'” from taking part in securities offerings made in reliance on Rule 506. The new rules were required by the Dodd-Frank Act of 2010, and the SEC first proposed these rules in May 2011. Prior to this rulemaking, Rule 506 did not impose any bad actor disqualification requirements. In contrast, the bad actor disqualification provisions under Rule 262 of the Regulation A exemption from registration has existed for decades. The new rules are based on the established Rule 262 bad actor disqualification provisions, modified to account for the statutory requirements of Section 926 of the Dodd-Frank Act and how the Rule 506 exemption differs from the Regulation A exemption in practice. The SEC’s new rules are set out in new paragraph (d) of Rule 506. The rules state that the Rule 506 exemption — including both “traditional” Rule 506(b) and new Rule 506(c) offerings — will not be available if the “covered persons” in an offering have triggered a disqualifying event. The new rules apply to a range of people (the “covered persons”) in an exempt offering made under Rule 506(b) or 506(c). On the issuer side, the covered persons under the rules include:

  • The issuer itself, its predecessors, and affiliated issuers;
  • Any director, executive officer, or other officer participating in the sale of securities (or the counterparts for such persons if the issuer is a partnership or LLC);
  • Any beneficial owner of twenty percent or more of outstanding voting equity securities; and
  • Any promoter connected to the issuer company at the time of sale.

With regard to intermediaries, the rule applies to:

  • Any investment manager of a pooled investment fund;
  • Any person who has been or will be paid remuneration for solicitation of investors; and
  • Any director and executive officer (along with the partnership and LLC counterparts) of the investment manager or solicitor.

The “disqualifying events” that will prevent a person from being involved in offerings made in reliance on Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c) include:

  • Any felony or misdemeanor convictions, within the past ten years (five years for the issuer), in connection with the purchase or sale of any security, involving making a false filing with the SEC, or arising out actions as an intermediary, advisor, or solicitor. The felony or misdemeanor convictions must relate to prior involvement with the offer or sale of a security, interactions with the SEC, or conduct as a securities intermediary. The disqualifying convictions do not include all criminal convictions involving fraud or deceit.
  • Any court order, within the past five years,  which, at the time of the sale of securities under Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c), restrains or enjoins a person from  engaging in practices in connection with a securities transactions, making false filings with the SEC, or acting as an intermediary, advisor, or solicitor. For disqualification under this item, the person must be subject to the court order; that is, specifically named in the order. Other people who may come under the scope of an order, but are not specifically named, will not trigger the disqualification.
  • Any final order of a federal or state financial regulator that, at the time of the sale of securities, bars the person engaging in the business, or associating with an entity, regulated by that regulator. Additionally, the disqualification is triggered by a final order, within the past ten years, based on a violation of any law or regulation that prohibits fraudulent, manipulative, or deceptive conduct. The applicable financial regulators include a state securities commission, state banking or thrift regulator, state insurance commission, federal banking regulator, the U.S. Commodity Futures Trading Commission, and the National Credit Union Administration.
  •  Any SEC disciplinary order suspending or limiting the activities of a person at the time of the sale of securities. These could be suspensions or revocations of a person’s registration as a broker, dealer, or investment advisor, or limitation on those activities, or a bar from being associated with the offering of penny stock.
  • Any SEC cease-and-desist order, within the past five years, that at the time of the sale orders a person to cease and desist from committing, or committing in the future, a violation of federal securities laws. These cease-and-desist orders arise out of the commission of securities fraud (i.e., knowingly misrepresenting a fact or omitting a fact necessary to make a previous statement not misleading) or making an unregistered, non-exempt offer of securities in violation of Section 5 of the Securities Act.
  • Any suspension or expulsion from a securities self-regulatory organization for any act or omission to act that constitutes conduct inconsistent with just and equitable principles of trade. Securities self-regulatory organizations include registered national securities exchanges, and national securities associations. The rules do not make clear whether a suspension results in a permanent disqualification or only operates during the period of the suspension.
  • Any order to stop or suspend a registration statement or Regulation A offering statement within the past five years. The disqualification applies to any filer or named underwriter, and extends to parties that are under investigation by the commission at the time of the Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c) securities offering.
  • Any Postal Service false representation order within the past five years, or temporary restraining order or preliminary injunction at the time of the sale of securities.

A covered person that is subject to a disqualifying event has the ability to petition the SEC and show good cause as to why the disqualification should not apply. The SEC notes specific situations where this may occur, such as a demonstration that a court order was entered without the person having an opportunity to challenge the order. Additionally, the disqualification event will not apply if the relevant court or regulatory authority indicates that the judgment or order should not bar the person from participating in a Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c) securities offering. The rules also create a reasonable care exception for the issuer.  Under that exception, the issuer may establish that it did not know, and even in the exercise of reasonable care, could not have known that a covered person triggered a disqualifying event. The standard for reasonable care includes the issuer’s factual inquiry into whether any covered person triggers a disqualifying event. The requirements for a factual inquiry vary according to the issuer’s situation. An issuer with only a few executive officers and directors may be expected to have knowledge of its own covered persons.  Factual inquiries on intermediaries may be done by questionnaires, certifications, and background investigations, accompanied by contractual representations and covenants. The factual inquiry should be done at a time that allows the issuer to have a complete and accurate understanding of the absence of disqualifying events at the time of the securities offering.  As such, the inquiry should be done as close to the offering as possible without being unduly burdensome.  Further, ongoing or long-lived offerings may require additional factual inquiries done on a reasonable basis. The rule is designed to phase in after it becomes effective in mid-September, 2013.  Disqualification will only result from disqualifying events that occur after the effective date of the new rules.  Nevertheless, any disqualifying events triggered by an issuer or covered person that occurred prior to the effective date are subject to mandatory disclosure to potential investors.  It is conceivable that failure to disclose a past disqualifying event could result in the finding of securities fraud, which would then trigger the disqualification from reliance on Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c) in future securities offerings. These new rules impose substantial requirements on issuers and intermediaries relying on the Rule 506(b) or Rule 506(c) exemptions from registration of securities.  Principally, issuers must establish that they have exercised reasonable care to discover whether any of the parties to a securities offering disqualify the issuer from utilizing the exemptions.  If a covered person triggers a disqualifying event, and the issuer fails to exercise reasonable care, that could lead to further securities law violations, triggering additional disqualifying events for the issuer, and thereby severely limiting access to the capital markets. * *** The following table compares the principal attributes of traditional placements under Rule 506, new Rule 506(c) offerings and offerings made under Rule 506(c)’s cousin, crowdfunding.  The SEC has not yet proposed its rules for crowdfunding, so additional restrictions are likely.

 Rule 506(b) offerings (traditional Regulation D)  New Rule 506(c) offerings  Crowdfunding (when legal)
Solicitation: Marketed directly to known investors without “general solicitation”; no internet solicitation Marketed over the internet; TV, advertisements and solicitation on social media permitted Marketed over the internet, but primary solicitation and disclosure happens on “funding portal”; publicity anywhere else (including social media) is restricted
Eligible issuers: Both SEC-registered and private companies can use exemption Both SEC-registered and private companies can use exemption Only companies not registered with the SEC can issue
Eligible investors: Up to 35 non-accredited investors permitted; no limits on accredited investors Only accredited investors may buy No restrictions on type of investors but they must show they understand their investment and are limited in dollar amount
Ascertaining investors’ status: Accredited investors typically self-certify Issuer may use various methods to “verify” accredited status; non-exclusive list of methods that may be relied on as meeting requirements Proposals to come
Offering size: No dollar limit on offering size No dollar limit on offering size $1m limit on offering size; SEC may decide not to include sales to accredited investors in that limit
Disclosure: Private Placement Memorandum typically used although not required if all investors are accreditedFiling Requirements: Form D (very short form with issuer and intermediary identity and offering description but no substantive disclosure) filed after offering starts Disclosure driven by market demands and liability concernsProposals would require earlier filing of Form D and additional amendment after closing; general solicitation materials proposed to be submitted informally to SEC Disclosure (including reviewed or audited financial statements) mandated by statute; additional disclosure likely to be mandatedFiling required with SEC; form to be determined
Liability: Liability under general Rule 10b-5 anti-fraud provisions for any person making untrue statements Liability under general Rule 10b-5 anti-fraud provisions for any person making untrue statements Rule 10b-5 liability plus Section 12(a)(2)-type liability for issuer, its officers and directors and anyone “selling” (including promoting) the offering
Resales: Securities are “restricted”; cannot be freely resold Securities are “restricted”; cannot be freely resold Very limited resales permitted for one year; may be designated “restricted” by SEC
Intermediaries: Intermediaries not required; any intermediaries used must be registered broker-dealers or entities exempt from B/D registration (such as VC Funds) Intermediaries not required; any used must be registered broker-dealers or exempt Intermediaries are compulsory; can be funding portals or broker-dealers

Need help making sure your Broker/Dealer or Crowdfunding Platform is meeting the new Crowdfunding compliance guidelines, contact CrowdCheck at:

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CrowdCheck provides due diligence and disclosure services for online investments, including Regulation D offerings.  We help platforms and issuers ensure that their offering satisfies legal and industry requirements, including the new “Bad Actor” rules and ensuring that issuer statements are accurate and not misleading.  CrowdCheck also provides investors with the tools they need to avoid fraud and make an informed investment decision.  We combine “hands on” and high tech to create a right-sized yet powerful product that works with the reality of small businesses and needs of investors.  For more information please contact us at info@crowdcheck.com or visit us at www.crowdcheck.com.  The above does not necessarily deal with every important topic or cover every aspect of the topics with which it deals. It is not designed to provide legal or other advice.


[1] Accredited investors include, in general, people with a net worth (excluding their residence) of $1 million, income of $200,000 a year (or $300,000 with their spouse), officers and directors of the issuer and various institutions that have more than $5 million in assets. The SEC is considering revising these standards, although it cannot make any revisions until July 2014.
[2] 60 days after publication in the Federal Register, which has not yet occurred.

Mary Jo White, SEC Approves JOBS Act Requirement to Lift General Solicitation Ban on Crowdfunding for Accredited Investors

10 Jul

SEC Eliminates the Prohibition on General Solicitation and General Advertising in Certain Crowdfunding Fundraising Offerings

By Robert Hoskins

The Securities and Exchange Commission today adopted a new rule to implement a JOBS Act requirement to lift the ban on general solicitation or general advertising for certain private securities offerings.

SEC Approves JOBS Act Requirement to Lift General Solicitation Ban

SEC Approves JOBS Act Requirement to Lift General Solicitation Ban

New SEC Rulemaking on Crowdfunding Guidelines for General Solicitation for Accredited Investors

Rule 506

The final rule approved today makes changes to Rule 506 to permit issuers to use general solicitation and general advertising to offer their securities provided that:

  • The issuer takes reasonable steps to verify that the investors are accredited investors.
  • All purchasers of the securities fall within one of the categories of persons who are accredited investors under an existing rule (Rule 501 of Regulation D) or the issuer reasonably believes that the investors fall within one of the categories at the time of the sale of the securities.

Under existing Rule 501, a person qualifies as an accredited investor if he or she has either:

  • An individual net worth or joint net worth with a spouse that exceeds $1 million at the time of the purchase, excluding the value (and any related indebtedness) of a primary residence.
  • An individual annual income that exceeded $200,000 in each of the two most recent years or a joint annual income with a spouse exceeding $300,000 for those years, and a reasonable expectation of the same income level in the current year.

The determination of the reasonableness of the steps taken to verify an accredited investor is an objective assessment by an issuer. An issuer is required to consider the facts and circumstances of each purchaser and the transaction. Nevertheless, in response to commenters’ requests, the final rule provides a non-exclusive list of methods that issuers may use to satisfy the verification requirement for individual investors.

The methods described in the final rule include the following:

  • Reviewing copies of any IRS form that reports the income of the purchaser and obtaining a written representation that the purchaser will likely continue to earn the necessary income in the current year.
  • Receiving a written confirmation from a registered broker-dealer, SEC-registered investment adviser, licensed attorney, or certified public accountant that such entity or person has taken reasonable steps to verify the purchaser’s accredited status.

The existing provisions of Rule 506 as a separate exemption are not affected by the final rule. Issuers conducting Rule 506 offerings without the use of general solicitation or general advertising can continue to conduct securities offerings in the same manner and aren’t subject to the new verification rule.

Rule 144A

Under the final rule, securities sold pursuant to Rule 144A can be offered to persons other than QIBs, including by means of general solicitation, provided that the securities are sold only to persons whom the seller and any person acting on behalf of the seller reasonably believe to be QIBs.

Form D

The final rule amends Form D, which is the notice that issuers must file with the SEC when they sell securities under Regulation D. The revised form adds a separate box for issuers to check if they are claiming the new Rule 506 exemption that would permit general solicitation or general advertising.

What’s Next

The rule amendments become effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.

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I-Banker Direct Augments Deal Flow for Accredited Investors Seeking Crowdfunding Investment Opportunities

18 May

I-Bankers Direct Launches US-Based Dealer/Broker Equity Crowdfunding Platform

By Robert Hoskins

I-Bankers Direct announced the launch of a web-based crowdfunding platform designed to transform the process of investing in private and public growth-stage companies. The platform, www.ibankersdirect.com, allows individuals to invest as little as $5,000 directly in selected small-cap growth businesses, pairing accredited investors with a growing list of emerging companies with investment capital needs.

“What they lacked is access to a reliable source of deals. We also know from experience how challenging it can be for small, growing businesses to raise capital. I-Bankers Direct was created to address these needs.”

“What they lacked is access to a reliable source of deals. We also know from experience how challenging it can be for small, growing businesses to raise capital. I-Bankers Direct was created to address these needs.”

With 24/7 online access to offering documents, management conference calls, company slide decks, video presentations and other decision-making support, individual investors now have the ability to evaluate and invest in promising business opportunities, based on their own schedule and from any Internet-connected device.

“It was clear to us that there are many high-net-worth individual investors in the marketplace who have both the ability and the desire to invest in small, dynamic companies,” said I-Bankers Direct President John Kallassy. “What they lacked is access to a reliable source of deals. We also know from experience how challenging it can be for small, growing businesses to raise capital. I-Bankers Direct was created to address these needs.”

I-Bankers Direct has set itself apart from other entrants in the crowdfunding field by focusing on transactions which appeal both to individual and institutional investors at the same time, thus transforming the capital-raising landscape for early-stage businesses. To that end, I-Bankers Direct has assembled an experienced team of investment professionals*, software innovators and ecommerce experts committed to transforming the capital-raising landscape for growth-stage businesses.

CEO Mike McCrory explains, “We’ve harnessed the power of the Internet—and leveraged the experience our team has gained helping companies access billions of dollars in capital over the past eighteen years. Our platform, recently capitalized with $1.5 million of institutional and private investment, provides accredited individual investors, angel investors, venture capitalists and private equity investors with 24/7 access to investments previously unavailable to them. It’s a win for everyone.”

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