BREAKING NEWS:
This could be quite favorable to our future plans to build up DNotes initial ecosystem to include a registered and licensed exchange. We will need to study this further. This is not something that will happen soon and should not be considered to be of any added value to DNotes price over the near term.
SEC Liberated Bitcoin Crowdfunding
Bitcoin Vox
2015-03-28 12:06 AM | Richard Bernes
http://bitcoinvox.com/article/1572/sec-liberated-bitcoin-crowdfundingNew SEC Ruling Can Be Revolutionary For Bitcoin Companies
On the 25th of March, the US Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) ratified regulations that would allow business startups to be crowdfunded.
Under the new rules, companies in the block chain network will now be able to get financial support from the investors that know the most about their businesses: their users.
There are many challenges that "Bitcoin 2.0" companies face due to the vague definition of "security" under US law.
While these new rules do not completely get rid of that ambiguity, they do succeed in creating a sort of low-cost safe haven for the companies that wish to avoid this unpredictability and possible exposure to criminals by simply considering their token sales as securities sales.
Before the new rules came into existence, companies could either make the sale of securities to rich individuals or after making their way through a rigorous and expensive SEC registration.
But, now thanks to the newly enforced rules, companies can sell securities to ordinary people, even over the internet, after filing in a mini-registration with the SEC.
What makes the new rules even more positive is the fact that state level compliance has been kept to a minimum. This is mostly due to the SEC preempting laws of state securities from this particular area.
There is still, obviously, a significant amount of fine print that businesses have to go through and then stick to. For example: businesses that take this path will require audited financial statements and will also have to continuously report to the SEC.
Restrictions on the amount of capital you can raise this way have been imposed as well. Depending on which "tier" of the rule the business is using, the limit can range from $20m to $50. This limit is unlikely to be an obstacle for most companies.
Furthermore, the amount of money that a particular individual can invest is restricted to 10% of that individual's annual income or net worth. The rules even allow investors to self-guarantee they have met the requirements needed to invest.
The rules are greatly detailed and companies need to ensure they understand every bit of it before they go ahead. There are rules which address sales carried out by affiliates, rules on presale "solicitations of interest," as well as plenty of rules about the mini-registration process.
According to the rules, only issuers based in Canada and US are eligible and a company can be disqualified for previous misdemeanors.
For bitcoin 2.0 companies, the new rules have the prospect of being revolutionary. Other bitcoin companies on the network can take advantage of the new rules as well by using them to raise capital from their more technology-dependent users. But, selling securities this way can prove to be a tough task.
The companies will need proper legal advice and ways to deal with the additional burden that going down this route will bring. Still, the companies having an alternate path to raise capital is a good thing, in the long run.
SEC Adopts Rules to Facilitate Smaller Companies’ Access to Capital
New Rules Provide Investors With More Investment Choices
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE
2015-49
Washington D.C., March 25, 2015 —
The Securities and Exchange Commission today adopted final rules to facilitate smaller companies’ access to capital. The new rules provide investors with more investment choices.
The new rules update and expand Regulation A, an existing exemption from registration for smaller issuers of securities. The rules are mandated by Title IV of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act.
The updated exemption will enable smaller companies to offer and sell up to $50 million of securities in a 12-month period, subject to eligibility, disclosure and reporting requirements.
“These new rules provide an effective, workable path to raising capital that also provides strong investor protections,” said SEC Chair Mary Jo White. “It is important for the Commission to continue to look for ways that our rules can facilitate capital-raising by smaller companies.”
The final rules, often referred to as Regulation A+, provide for two tiers of offerings: Tier 1, for offerings of securities of up to $20 million in a 12-month period, with not more than $6 million in offers by selling security-holders that are affiliates of the issuer; and Tier 2, for offerings of securities of up to $50 million in a 12-month period, with not more than $15 million in offers by selling security-holders that are affiliates of the issuer. Both Tiers are subject to certain basic requirements while Tier 2 offerings are also subject to additional disclosure and ongoing reporting requirements.
The final rules also provide for the preemption of state securities law registration and qualification requirements for securities offered or sold to “qualified purchasers” in Tier 2 offerings. Tier 1 offerings will be subject to federal and state registration and qualification requirements, and issuers may take advantage of the coordinated review program developed by the North American Securities Administrators Association (NASAA).
The rules will be effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.
* * *
FACT SHEET
Regulation A+
SEC Open Meeting
March 25, 2015
Highlights of the Final Rules
The final rules, often referred to as Regulation A+, would implement Title IV of the JOBS Act and provide for two tiers of offerings:
• Tier 1, which would consist of securities offerings of up to $20 million in a 12-month period, with not more than $6 million in offers by selling security-holders that are affiliates of the issuer.
• Tier 2, which would consist of securities offerings of up to $50 million in a 12-month period, with not more than $15 million in offers by selling security-holders that are affiliates of the issuer.
In addition to the limits on secondary sales by affiliates, the rules also limit sales by all selling security-holders to no more than 30 percent of a particular offering in the issuer’s initial Regulation A offering and subsequent Regulation A offerings for the first 12 months following the initial offering.
For offerings of up to $20 million, the issuer could elect whether to proceed under Tier 1 or Tier 2. Both tiers would be subject to basic requirements as to issuer eligibility, disclosure, and other matters, drawn from the current provisions of Regulation A. Both tiers would also permit companies to submit draft offering statements for non public review by Commission staff before filing, permit the continued use of solicitation materials after filing the offering statement, require the electronic filing of offering materials and otherwise align Regulation A with current practice for registered offerings.
Additional Tier 2 Requirements
In addition to these basic requirements, companies conducting Tier 2 offerings would be subject to other requirements, including:
• A requirement to provide audited financial statements.
• A requirement to file annual, semiannual and current event reports.
• A limitation on the amount of securities non-accredited investors can purchase in a Tier 2 offering of no more than 10 percent of the greater of the investor’s annual income or net worth.
The staff would also conduct a study and submit a report to the Commission on the impact of both the Tier 1 and Tier 2 offerings on capital formation and investor protection no later than five years following the adoption of the amendments to Regulation A.
The Commission is exploring ways to further collaborate with state regulators, including a program for a representative of NASAA or a state securities regulator to work with the staff in the SEC’s Division of Corporation Finance in implementing these rules.
Eligibility
The exemption would be limited to companies organized in and with their principal place of business in the United States or Canada. The exemption would not be available to companies that:
• Are already SEC reporting companies and certain investment companies.
• Have no specific business plan or purpose or have indicated their business plan is to engage in a merger or acquisition with an unidentified company.
• Are seeking to offer and sell asset-backed securities or fractional undivided interests in oil, gas or other mineral rights.
• Have been subject to any order of the Commission under Exchange Act Section 12(j) entered within the past five years.
• Have not filed ongoing reports required by the rules during the preceding two years.
• Are disqualified under the “bad actor” disqualification rules.
The rules exempt securities in a Tier 2 offering from the mandatory registration requirements of Exchange Act Section 12(g) if the issuer meets all of the following conditions:
• Engages services from a transfer agent registered with the Commission.
• Remains subject to a Tier 2 reporting obligation.
• Is current in its annual and semiannual reporting at fiscal year-end.
• Has a public float of less than $75 million as of the last business day of its most recently completed semiannual period, or, in the absence of a public float, had annual revenues of less than $50 million as of its most recently completed fiscal year.
An issuer that exceeds the dollar and Section 12(g) registration thresholds would have a two-year transition period before it must register its class of securities, provided it timely files all of its ongoing reports required under Regulation A.
Preemption of Blue Sky Law
In light of the total package of investor protections included in amended Regulation A, the rules provide for the preemption of state securities law registration and qualification requirements for securities offered or sold to “qualified purchasers,” defined to be any person to whom securities are offered or sold under a
Tier 2 offering.
Background
Under the Securities Act of 1933, when a company offers or sells securities to potential investors, it must either register the offer and sale or rely on an exemption from registration. Regulation A is a longstanding exemption from registration that permits unregistered public offerings of up to $5 million of securities in any 12-month period, including no more than $1.5 million of securities offered by security-holders of the company. In recent years, Regulation A offerings have been relatively rare in comparison to offerings conducted in reliance on other Securities Act exemptions or on a registered basis.
The JOBS Act amended the Securities Act to require the Commission to update and expand the Regulation A exemption. In particular, the JOBS Act directed the Commission to:
• Adopt rules that would allow offerings of up to $50 million of securities within a 12-month period.
• Require companies conducting such offerings to file annual audited financial statements with the SEC.
• Adopt additional requirements and conditions that the Commission determines necessary.
Effective Date for Regulation A+
The rule amendments become effective 60 days after publication in the Federal Register.