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Introduction to Federal Private Offering Exemptions
In this article I give a brief
overview of the federal exemptions that are most commonly used for private,
limited offerings and private placements in California.
I intend this article as a brief
introduction only. I narrow down to more detail in other articles – for
example, my discussion of Regulation D spans a number of articles. Consider
also taking a step back for a bird’s eye view of private offerings – see my
article “Introduction to Private Offerings.”
Generally, companies look to four
federal exemptions when offering securities in California:
- Section 4(2) of the Securities
Act.
- Regulation D.
- The intrastate exemption in
Section 3(a)(11) of the Securities Act.
- Rule 1001 in combination with
Section 25102(n) of the California Corporate Securities Law of 1968.
Section 4(2)
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act
exempts from federal registration any transaction by an issuer not involving
a public offering. This is the traditional exemption for private
offerings. Companies use Section 4(2) for offerings that are obviously
private, for example, a private placement of securities with institutions or
the promotion of a business venture by a few closely related persons.
Section 4(2) is not available for offerings of speculative ventures to
unrelated and uninformed persons.
The boundaries of Section 4(2) are
not well defined. The SEC and courts have consistently taken the position
that whether Section 4(2) applies depends on the circumstances of the
offering, including the issuer’s relationship with the investors, and the
nature, size and manner of the offering.
When in doubt about any of these
factors, do not use Section 4(2). Instead rely on Regulation D.
Regulation D
Most issuers rely on Regulation D
when conducting their private offerings of securities. Within Regulation D,
most issuers use the Rule 504 exemption for offerings up to $1 million, and
the Rule 506 exemption for all other offerings.
All Regulation D offerings are
private offerings, meaning that the issuer may not sell securities by any
general solicitation or advertisement. A large scale offering under
Regulation D also might require the delivery of a disclosure documents (also
called a private placement memorandum, or an offering circular) to
unaccredited investors. Lastly, all securities issued through Regulation D
are “restricted” securities, meaning that the investor is restricted in its
resale of the securities.
In the interests of brevity,
however, I stop my discussion of Regulation D here. For more information,
please see my article, “Introduction to Regulation D” and my follow-on,
detailed articles about Regulation D.
Intrastate
Offering
Section 3(a)(11) of the Securities
Act exempts from registration any offering made solely to persons residing
in a single state or territory, where the issuer is incorporated and doing
business in the same state. The rationale is that a wholly intrastate
transaction is adequately policed by the laws of the state, hence there is
no need for an additional layer of federal law.
Under Rule 147, an issuer does
business in a state if (1) at least 80% of its gross revenues (including
subsidiaries) is derived from operations or assets in-state; (2) at least
80% of its assets (including subsidiaries) is located in-state; (3) at least
80% of the offering's net proceeds is used in-state; and (4) its principal
office is in-state. During the offering period and for nine months from the
last sale by the issuer, purchasers may only resell their stock to other
persons living in-state.
Courts have narrowly construed the
Section 3(a)(11) intrastate exemption, and you should use it with caution.
For example, an offer to even one out-of-state resident will blow the
exemption. The risk is higher because the doctrine of integration applies –
the intrastate exemption can be integrated with prior and future offerings
thereby causing an almost certain loss of the intrastate exemption.
Even assuming that you can use the
intrastate exemption, this does not mean that you get a free pass from
securities regulation. Remember that the exemption is at the federal level,
and you must still comply with a state exemption. This task will require
more or less work depending on the complexity of the state exemption.
Rule 1001 in
Combination with California Section 25102(n)
Federal Rule 1001 gives an exemption
for offerings up to $5 million that comply with § 25102(n) of the California
Corporation Code.
California § 25102(n) is limited to
issuers that are California companies (with some minor exceptions).
Investors must be “qualified purchasers.” This means, generally, accredited
investors and natural persons with a net worth specified in the statute.
For the most part, Section 25102(n)
has only one feature that might be interesting – a “test the waters”
disclosure. In brief, issuers may publicly disseminate a limited
written announcement of the offering. Potential investors may then respond
to the announcement by contacting the issuer. The issuer may not telephone
a prospective investor until it has determined that the investor is a
qualified purchaser. Issuers must provide disclosure documents to
unaccredited investors at least 5 days prior to sale.
The issuer must file a notice of
transaction in California at the first to occur of the publication of the
general announcement or the initial offer of securities. The issuer will
lose the exemption if it misses its initial filing deadline. A second
filing is required within 10 business days after the close or abandonment of
the offering, and in no case later than 210 days after the filing of the
initial notice.
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This article only gives a brief
introduction to the federal private offering exemptions. I have only
scratched the surface. I strongly urge you to get competent legal,
accounting and tax counsel when you offer securities.
Call
me to schedule a legal consultation:
510-796-9144
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