99-5295. Revision of Rule 504 of Regulation D, the ``Seed Capital'' Exemption  

  • [Federal Register Volume 64, Number 44 (Monday, March 8, 1999)]
    [Rules and Regulations]
    [Pages 11090-11094]
    From the Federal Register Online via the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
    [FR Doc No: 99-5295]
    
    
    
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    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    Part II
    
    
    
    
    
    Securities and Exchange Commission
    
    
    
    
    
    _______________________________________________________________________
    
    
    
    17 CFR Part 230, et al.
    
    
    
    Revision of Rule 504 of Regulation D, the ``Seed Capital'' Exemption; 
    Rule 701--Exempt Offerings Pursuant to Compensatory Arrangements; 
    Registration of Securities on Form S-8; Final Rules
    
    
    
    Registration of Securities on Form S-8; Publication or Submission of 
    Quotations Without Specified Information; Proposed Rules
    
    Federal Register / Vol. 64, No. 44 / Monday, March 8, 1999 / Rules 
    and Regulations
    
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    SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION
    
    17 CFR Part 230
    
    [Release No. 33-7644; S7-14-98]
    RIN 3235-AH35
    
    
    Revision of Rule 504 of Regulation D, the ``Seed Capital'' 
    Exemption
    
    AGENCY: Securities and Exchange Commission.
    
    ACTION: Final rule.
    
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    SUMMARY: The Securities and Exchange Commission (``we'' or 
    ``Commission'') is adopting amendments to Rule 504 of Regulation D, 
    which provides an exemption from Securities Act registration for 
    securities offerings of non-reporting companies that do not exceed an 
    aggregate annual amount of $1 million. Recent fraudulent secondary 
    transactions in the over-the-counter markets of ``microcap'' companies 
    have involved freely tradable securities issued in Rule 504 offerings. 
    To curb these abuses, we are modifying Rule 504 to limit the 
    circumstances where general solicitation is permitted and ``freely 
    tradable'' securities may be issued in reliance on the rule to 
    transactions registered under state law requiring public filing and 
    delivery of a disclosure document to investors before sale, or exempted 
    under state law permitting general solicitation and advertising so long 
    as sales are made only to accredited investors. Since most transactions 
    under Rule 504 are private ones, they will continue to be permissible 
    under the exemption, but general solicitation and advertising will not 
    be permitted and the securities will be ``restricted.''
    
    EFFECTIVE DATE: April 7, 1999.
    
    FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: Richard K. Wulff or Barbara C. Jacobs 
    (202-942-2950), Office of Small Business, Division of Corporation 
    Finance, Securities and Exchange Commission, 450 Fifth Street, NW, 
    Washington, DC 20549.
    
    SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
    
    I. Executive Summary and Background
    
        Congress has passed significant legislation to aid small businesses 
    in raising capital in the private and public securities markets over 
    the years. The Small Business Investment Incentive Act of 1980, for 
    example, was designed to reduce the regulatory restraints on small 
    business capital formation.\1\ In response to that Act, in 1982, we 
    adopted Regulation D \2\ under the Securities Act of 1933 (``Securities 
    Act'').\3\ Regulation D is an exemption from Securities Act 
    registration that was designed to:
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        \1\ Pub. L. No. 96-477, 944 Stat. 2275. That Act amended the 
    Securities Act by adding Section 4(6) [15 U.S.C. 77(d)(6)], which 
    among other matters, exempts from registration offers or sales of 
    securities in the aggregate amount of $5 million or less if solely 
    made to ``accredited investors''.
        \2\ 17 CFR 230.501 et seq. See Release No. 33-6389 (March 8, 
    1982) [47 FR 11251].
        \3\ 15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.
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         Simplify existing rules and regulations;
         Eliminate any unnecessary restrictions that those rules 
    and regulations placed on issuers, particularly small businesses; and
         Achieve uniformity between state and federal exemptions in 
    order to facilitate capital formation consistent with the protection of 
    investors.\4\
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        \4\ See Release No. 33-6389 at Section II.A.
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        Regulation D provides exemptions from Securities Act registration 
    for securities offerings under three separate rules: Rules 504, 505 and 
    506.\5\ Rule 504 is the limited offering exemption designed to aid 
    small businesses raising ``seed capital.'' Currently, Rule 504 permits 
    a non-reporting issuer \6\ to offer and sell securities to an unlimited 
    number of persons without regard to their sophistication or experience 
    and without delivery of any specified information in a public 
    offering.\7\ General solicitation and general advertising are permitted 
    for all Rule 504 offerings. The aggregate offering price of this 
    exemption is limited to $1 million in any 12-month period; and certain 
    other offerings must be aggregated with the Rule 504 offering in 
    determining the available sales amount.\8\ Securities sold under this 
    exemption may be resold freely by non-affiliates of the issuer \9\ who 
    are not otherwise acting as an underwriter.\10\
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        \5\ Rules 504 and 505 are dedicated to the needs of small 
    issuers; they are based on our authority under Section 3(b) of the 
    Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77(b)], which permits us to create 
    exemptions where the aggregate amount of the offering does not 
    exceed $5 million. In 1996, Section 28 was added to the Securities 
    Act [15 U.S.C. 78bb], which gives us broad general exemptive 
    authority without dollar limit. In a companion release, we are 
    adopting amendments to Rule 701 of the Securities Act [17 CFR 
    230.701] pursuant to this new authority. See Release No. 33-7645.
        Rule 505 is designed to help small businesses because it permits 
    sales to a small number of nonaccredited, unsophisticated investors. 
    Rule 506 is our non-exclusive safe harbor rule adopted under the 
    ``non-public'' offering exemption of Section 4(2) of the Securities 
    Act [15 U.S.C. 77d(2)]. It permits sales only to accredited 
    investors and a limited number of sophisticated investors.
        \6\ A non-reporting issuer is an issuer that is not required to 
    file reports with the Commission under Section 13 or 15(d) of the 
    Securities Exchange Act of 1934 [15 U.S.C. 78a et seq.] (``Exchange 
    Act''). We recently approved a proposed rule amendment to Rule 6530 
    of the National Association of Securities Dealers, Inc. (``NASD'') 
    to limit quotations on the OTC Bulletin Board (``OTCBB'') to the 
    securities of issuers that make current filings under Section 13 or 
    15(d) or other applicable regulatory authority, among other matters. 
    See Release No. 34-40878 (January 4, 1999) [64 FR 1255]. As such, 
    once an OTCBB issuer becomes subject to our reporting requirements, 
    it would be ineligible to use Rule 504.
        In our recent Securities Act Reform proposals, we solicited 
    comment on whether a reporting company should be able to rely on 
    Rule 504 for the issuance of securities underlying convertible 
    securities and warrants that it had previously offered in compliance 
    with Rule 504 when it was not a reporting company. See Release No. 
    33-7606 (November 3, 1998) [63 FR 67174].
        \7\ Other issuers that are ineligible to use Rule 504 include 
    investment companies or development stage companies that either have 
    no specific business plan or purpose or have indicated that the 
    business plan is to engage in a merger or acquisition with an 
    unidentified company or companies, or other entity or person. See 
    Rule 504(a) of Regulation D.
        As with all Regulation D offerings, we require a Form D, a 
    simple six-page notice, to be filed with us no later than 15 days 
    after the first sale in the Rule 504 offering. See Rule 503 of 
    Regulation D [17 CFR 230.503]. Filing a Form D is not, however a 
    condition to the exemption.
        \8\ Rule 504 offerings are aggregated for this purpose with all 
    other offerings exempt under Section 3(b) (e.g., Rule 504 or Rule 
    505 offerings) and all offerings made in violation of Section 5(a) 
    of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77e(a)].
        \9\ See interpretive letter to Mr. E.H. Hawkins (June 26, 1997), 
    setting forth the views of the Division of Corporation Finance that 
    affiliates who receive securities in a Rule 504 offering are subject 
    to resale limitations.
        \10\ See fn. 17 and 18, below.
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        While Regulation D offerings are exempt from federal securities 
    registration requirements, currently these offerings must be registered 
    in each state in which they are offered unless a state exemption is 
    available.\11\ The vast majority of states require registration of 
    public Rule 504 offerings.\12\ In adopting Rule 504, we placed 
    substantial reliance upon state securities laws because the size and 
    local nature of these small offerings did not appear to warrant 
    imposing extensive federal regulation. These offerings continue, 
    however, to be subject to federal antifraud and other civil liability 
    provisions.
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        \11\ See, e.g., the Uniform Limited Offering Exemption 
    (``ULOE'') developed by the North American Securities Administrators 
    Association, Inc. (``NASAA''), which was designed to be a 
    coordinating state exemption with Rule 505 of Regulation D, and 
    optionally Rule 506. Rule 504 is not a part of ULOE.
        NASAA is an association of securities commissioners from each of 
    the 50 states, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico, Mexico and 
    several provinces of Canada.
        \12\ New York and the District of Columbia do not require 
    registration of Rule 504 offerings.
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        Unfortunately, there have been recent disturbing developments in 
    the secondary markets \13\ for some securities
    
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    initially issued under Rule 504,\14\ and to a lesser degree, in the 
    initial Rule 504 issuances themselves.\15\ These offerings generally 
    involved the securities of ``microcap'' companies, i.e., those 
    characterized by thin capitalization, low share prices, limited public 
    information and little or no analyst coverage. Recent market 
    innovations and technological changes, most notably, the Internet, have 
    created the possibility of nation-wide Rule 504 offerings for 
    securities of non-reporting companies that were once thought to be sold 
    locally.
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        \13\ These secondary markets include the OTCBB operated by the 
    NASD or the pink sheets published by the National Quotation Bureau, 
    Inc.
        \14\ See, e.g., SEC v. Szur, et al., Lit. No. 15595, S.D.N.Y., 
    December 18, 1997; SEC v. Badger, et al. Lit. No. 15595, S.D.N.Y., 
    December 18, 1997; SEC v. Scudiero, et al., Lit. No. 15595, 
    S.D.N.Y., December 18, 1997; SEC v. Ruge, et al., Lit. No. 15595, 
    S.D.N.Y., December 18, 1997; and SEC v. Pignatiello, et al., Lit. 
    No. 15595, S.D.N.Y., December 18, 1997. In these cases, we filed 
    five civil injunctive actions charging fifty-eight defendants with 
    manipulation of the over-the-counter markets for ``microcap'' 
    securities. The five actions were the result of an undercover 
    investigation into illegal practices in these markets conducted by 
    the United States Attorney's Office for the Southern District of New 
    York and the Federal Bureau of Investigation, with assistance from 
    the NASD and us.
        See also Schroeder, ``Penny Stock Fraud is Again on a 
    Resurgence, Bolstered by Loopholes and New Technology, Wall St. J., 
    September 4, 1997 at 12.
        \15\ See, e.g., SEC v. Millennium Software Solutions, Inc. and 
    Mark Shkolir, Lit. No. 15603, S.D.N.Y., December 23, 1997 and SEC v. 
    Spacedev, Inc. and James W. Benson, Securities Act Rel. No. 7561, 
    August 6, 1998.
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        In some cases, Rule 504 has been used in fraudulent schemes to make 
    prearranged ``sales'' of securities under the rule to nominees in 
    states that do not have registration or prospectus delivery 
    requirements. As a part of this arrangement, these securities are then 
    placed with broker-dealers who use cold-calling techniques to sell the 
    securities at ever-increasing prices to unknowing investors. When their 
    inventory of shares is exhausted, these firms permit the artificial 
    market demand created to collapse, and investors lose much, if not all, 
    of their investment. This scheme is sometimes colloquially referred to 
    as ``pump and dump.''
        Regulation D is only available for offers and sales by an issuer of 
    securities to initial purchasers; it is not available to any affiliate 
    of the issuer or to any person for resales of the securities.\16\ Thus, 
    where a purchaser of Rule 504 securities wishes to sell these 
    securities, he or she must either register the transaction or have an 
    exemption for the transaction. Those who purchase such securities with 
    a view to their distribution are acting as ``underwriters'' \17\ and 
    thus their sales of the securities are not exempt from 
    registration.\18\ In these circumstances, these persons could be 
    charged with violating Section 5 of the Securities Act.\19\ In 
    addition, they could be charged with violating the antifraud provisions 
    of the Securities Act and the Exchange Act for any material 
    misrepresentations made in the Rule 504 offering.\20\
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        \16\ See Preliminary Note 4 to Regulation D.
        \17\ The term ``underwriter'' is defined in Section 2(a)(11) of 
    the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77(b)(11)] to include ``any person who 
    has purchased from an issuer with a view to, or offers or sells for 
    an issuer in connection with, the distribution of any security, or 
    participates or has a direct or indirect participation in any such 
    undertaking, or participates or has a participation in the direct or 
    indirect underwriting of any such undertaking. * * *
        \18\ In particular, the ``resale'' exemption of Section 4(1) of 
    the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77d(1)] is unavailable since the 
    exemption is available to ``any person other than an issuer, 
    underwriter or dealer.'' In this case, the purchasers are acting as 
    underwriters, as explained above. The dealer exemption of Section 
    4(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77d(3)] also is unavailable 
    where the person relying upon the exemption acts as an 
    ``underwriter.''
        See also Note 6 to Regulation D, which provides that Regulation 
    D is not available to any issuer for any transaction or chain of 
    transactions that, although in technical compliance with the rules, 
    is part of a plan or scheme to evade the registration provisions of 
    the Securities Act. In such cases, registration is required.
        \19\ 15 U.S.C. 77e.
        \20\ Section 17 of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77q(a)], 
    Section 10(b) of the Exchange Act [15 U.S.C. 78j(b)] and Rule 10b-5 
    thereunder [17 CFR 240.10b-5].
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        On May 21, 1998, we proposed amendments to Rule 504 to eliminate 
    the freely tradable nature of the securities issued under the 
    exemption.\21\ If we adopted that proposal, these securities could be 
    resold only:
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        \21\ Release No. 33-7541 (May 21, 1998) [63 FR 29168] (``Rule 
    504 Proposing Release''). The Commission received 33 letters of 
    comment. The comment letters are available for inspection and 
    copying in the Commission's Public Reference Room in File No. S7-14-
    98. Comments that were submitted electronically are available on the 
    Commission's website (www.sec.gov).
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         After the one-year holding period of Rule 144\22\;
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        \22\ 17 CFR 230.144.
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         Through registration; or
         Through another exemption (such as Regulation A\23\), if 
    available.
    
        \23\ 17 CFR 230.251 et seq.
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    By making all securities issued in a Rule 504 transaction restricted, 
    we thought that unscrupulous persons would be less likely to use the 
    rule as the source of freely tradable securities they need to 
    facilitate their fraudulent transactions.
        In the Rule 504 Proposing Release, we also solicited comment on an 
    alternative to revise Rule 504 so it would be substantially similar to 
    its pre-1992 format, permitting public offerings only where the issuer 
    complies with state registration processes that require the preparation 
    and delivery of a disclosure document to investors before sale of the 
    securities. We also solicited comment on the appropriate treatment for 
    offerings made under certain state exemptions, such as the one recently 
    developed for sales to accredited investors.\24\
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        \24\ State exemptions of this nature include those based upon 
    the ``Model Accredited Investor Exemption,'' which was adopted by 
    NASAA in 1997. CCH NASAA Reporter Para.361. Generally, the rule 
    exempts offers and sales of securities from state registration 
    requirements, if among other matters, the securities are sold only 
    to persons who are, or are reasonably believed to be, ``accredited 
    investors'' as defined in Rule 501(a) of Regulation D [17 CFR 
    230.501(a)]. The model restricts transfer of the securities for 12 
    months after issuance except to other accredited investors or if 
    registered. Written solicitations under that provision are generally 
    limited to a type of ``tombstone'' ad.
        As of December 31, 1998, 29 states and the Commonwealth of 
    Puerto Rico have an accredited investor exemption permitting some 
    form of general solicitation and two states had adopted specific 
    accredited investor exemptions to work with the U.S. Small Business 
    Administration's Angel Capital Electronic Network (ACE-Net). Of 
    these, 15 states have adopted NASAA's Model Accredited Investor 
    Exemption through statute, regulation or executive order. The 
    remaining 14 states either have accredited investor exemptions pre-
    dating the Model Exemption or have adopted variations of the Model 
    Exemption. Of the 19 states that do not have an accredited investor 
    exemption permitting general solicitation, seven have statutory or 
    regulatory language pending to adopt such an exemption.
        ACE-Net is an Internet-based, securities listing service where 
    small, growing companies can list their stock offerings to 
    accredited investors. It is a public/private partnership between the 
    SBA and 38 non-profit, university-and state-based entities around 
    the country. See Angel Capital Electronic Network (pub. avail. 
    October 25, 1996).
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        For the reasons discussed below, we are again conditioning the 
    availability of Rule 504 for public offerings on the extent of state 
    regulation over those offerings by making the exemption substantially 
    similar to its pre-1992 format.\25\ We believe that this alternative is 
    an effective way to combat the abuses we have described and at the same 
    time preserve the ability of legitimate small businesses to raise 
    capital. This approach is more narrowly targeted to the abuses we have 
    observed than simply restricting all securities issued in a Rule 504 
    transaction. As amended, the rule establishes the general principle 
    that securities issued under the exemption, just like the other 
    Regulation D exemptions, will be restricted, and prohibits general 
    solicitation and general advertising, unless the specified conditions
    
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    permitting a public offering are met. These conditions are:
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        \25\ Unlike the rule as amended today, the pre-1992 format of 
    Rule 504 did not include a provision for state law exemptions for 
    sales made to accredited investors or any requirement for publicly 
    filing the disclosure document that is delivered to investors 
    although this has long been a standard feature of state registration 
    provisions. It also required issuers in private Rule 504 offerings 
    to advise purchasers of the resale limitations on the securities a 
    reasonable period of time before sale.
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         The transactions are registered under a state law 
    requiring public filing and delivery of a disclosure document before 
    sale. For sales to occur in a state without this sort of provision, the 
    transactions must be registered in another state with such a provision 
    and the disclosure document filed in that state must be delivered to 
    all purchasers before sale in both states; or
         The securities are issued under a state law exemption that 
    permits general solicitation and general advertising so long as sales 
    are made only to ``accredited investors'' as that term is defined in 
    Regulation D.\26\
    
        \26\ See Rule 501(a) of Regulation D.
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    Investor protection concerns require that this action be taken to curb 
    misuse of this exemption in the markets for ``microcap'' companies. 
    Requiring issuers to go through state registration and deliver 
    disclosure documents to investors in order to issue freely tradable 
    securities in Rule 504 transactions provides information for 
    prospective investors to make more informed investment decisions. These 
    amendments are part of our comprehensive agenda to deter registration 
    and trading abuses, particularly by ``microcap'' issuers. We have 
    developed a four-pronged approach to deter ``microcap'' fraud: 
    enforcement, investor education, compliance examinations, and 
    regulation.\27\
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        \27\ We are issuing four companion releases today. See Release 
    No. 33-7646, which adopts revisions to Form S-8, the short-form 
    registration statement for issuing securities to employees, 
    consultants and advisors as compensation, in order to curb abusive 
    situations and Release No. 33-7647, which contains additional 
    proposals to Form S-8 to further reduce abuse of the form. See 
    Release No. 34-41110, which reproposes amendments to Exchange Act 
    Rule 15c2-11 [17 CFR 240.15c2-11] to require the first broker-dealer 
    that publishes any quotation for a covered security to review 
    information about the issuer and thereafter other broker-dealers to 
    review information about the issuer when they first publish or 
    resume publishing a priced quotation for a covered security. See 
    also Release No. 33-7645, which adopts amendments to Form 701, the 
    exemption for non-reporting companies to issue securities to 
    employees, consultants and advisors.
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        We believe the amendments to Rule 504 adopted today will deter the 
    abuses we have seen, while not impeding legitimate ``seed capital'' 
    offerings. We will monitor the use of the rule, as revised, and also 
    contact the state regulatory authorities regarding their experience 
    with these offerings. If it appears that Rule 504 is still being 
    misused, we will consider adding stronger measures, such as requiring 
    an after-market information delivery requirement \28\ or 
    disqualification provisions.\29\ With respect to the accredited 
    investor aspect of the revised rule, we will work with the states to 
    assess its use. If the new regulatory scheme is being misused, 
    particularly in states that do not impose transfer restrictions on the 
    resale of the securities by accredited investors, we will explore with 
    these states the viability of imposing such restrictions under their 
    provisions. Failing that, we would consider making the securities 
    ``restricted'' as defined in Rule 144.
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        \28\ See Section 4(3) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 77d(3)], 
    Securities Act Rule 174 [17 CFR 230.174] and Rule 251(d)(2)(ii) of 
    Regulation A [17 CFR 230.251(d)(2)(ii)].
        \29\ See Rule 505(b)(2)(iii) of Regulation D [17 CFR 
    230.505(b)(2)(iii)] or Rule 262 of Regulation A [17 CFR 230.262].
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    II. Amendments to Rule 504
    
        Before 1992, Rule 504 exempted both public and private offerings. 
    It exempted public offerings if sales did not exceed $1 million \30\ in 
    a 12-month period and if the offering was registered with one or more 
    states that required the preparation and delivery of a disclosure 
    document to investors before sale.\31\ Private offerings, in which 
    general solicitation and general advertising were prohibited, were 
    exempt if sales did not exceed $500,000. State registration was not a 
    condition to the exemption in the private context.
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        \30\ As originally adopted in 1982, the exemption was subject to 
    a $500,000 limitation. In 1988, the ceiling for public offerings was 
    increased to $1 million. See Release No. 33-6758 (March 3, 1988) [53 
    FR 7866].
        \31\ For example, Form U-7 (also referred to as ULOR, uniform 
    limited offering registration, or SCOR, small corporate offering 
    registration) was developed by NASAA to be a special registration 
    format for companies registering securities under state securities 
    laws when relying upon the federal Rule 504 exemption. See Harris, 
    Keller, Stakias & Liles, Financing the ``American Dream.''
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        In July 1992, we adopted revisions to our rules and forms to 
    facilitate capital raising by small businesses by reducing the 
    compliance burdens placed on those companies by the federal securities 
    laws.\32\ The amendments eliminated all restrictions on the manner of 
    offering and on resales under Rule 504. As a result, a non-reporting 
    company could offer up to $1 million of securities in a 12-month period 
    and be subject only to the antifraud provisions of the federal 
    securities laws. General solicitation and general advertising were 
    permitted for all Rule 504 offerings. Further, securities sold under 
    Rule 504 were not ``restricted'' securities and thus were available for 
    immediate resale by non-affiliates of the issuer, as long as they were 
    not otherwise ``underwriters'' \33\ of the offering.\34\
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        \32\ See Release No. 33-6949 (July 30, 1992) [57 FR 36442]. On 
    April 28, l993, we adopted additional revisions to further 
    facilitate financings by small business issuers. See Release No. 33-
    6996 (April 28, 1993) [58 FR 26509].
        \33\ Section 2(a)(11) of the Securities Act [15 U.S.C. 
    77b(a)(11)].
        \34\ Regulation D exemptions are available only to the issuer of 
    the securities. None of these exemptions can be used by any other 
    person. See Preliminary Note 4 to Regulation D.
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        In the Rule 504 Proposing Release, we proposed that all securities 
    issued in a Rule 504 transaction would be ``restricted'' from resale 
    for a one-year period after issuance. This proposal directly addressed 
    the abuses we witnessed in the secondary markets. Almost all commenters 
    objected to this approach, since it would require issuers to offer a 
    significant liquidity discount in all Rule 504 issuances, even fully 
    state registered ones, causing a significant reduction in the amounts 
    of capital they could raise. While acknowledging that this approach 
    would have some impact upon the targeted problem in the secondary 
    market, commenters, including NASAA, believed that our alternative 
    approach, which was to reinstitute the rule largely as it had been in 
    effect for a number of years before 1992, would be equally, if not 
    more, effective since if an issuer goes through state registration and 
    must deliver a disclosure document to prospective investors, sufficient 
    information ought to be available in the markets to permit investors to 
    make more informed investment decisions and thus deter manipulation of 
    Rule 504 securities. They also noted that this approach would not 
    unduly penalize small businesses, since they would have some avenue 
    open to them to issue freely transferable securities.
        The amendments we adopt today implement the alternative narrower 
    reform. By returning the Rule 504 exemption largely to its pre-1992 
    framework, we intend to deter ``microcap'' fraud. We believe that the 
    vast majority of current Rule 504 offerings are private. Private 
    offerings under Rule 504 will be permitted for up to $1 million in a 
    12-month period, under the same terms and conditions, except for the 
    specific disclosure requirements,\35\ as offerings under Rules 505 and 
    506. Securities in these offerings will be restricted, and these 
    offerings may no longer involve general solicitation and advertising.
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        \35\ Rule 502(b)(1) of Regulation D [17 CFR 230.501(b)(1)].
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        On the other hand, the rule as revised leaves avenues open for 
    issuers to make less limited offerings under Rule 504. By focusing on 
    state registration, review and disclosure requirements, we are still
    
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    permitting legitimate small issuers to access the capital markets 
    without having to sell restricted securities. In adopting this reform, 
    we note that the state registration and review system is generally 
    comprehensive. As of the effective date of these amendments, an issuer 
    will only be able to issue unrestricted or freely tradable securities 
    in a Rule 504 offering and engage in general solicitation or general 
    advertising in two circumstances:
         If it registers the offering under a state law that 
    requires the public filing \36\ and delivery of a disclosure document 
    to investors before sale; \37\ or
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        \36\ The disclosure document must be publicly available at the 
    state level. This document must provide substantive disclosure to 
    investors, including the business and financial condition of the 
    issuer (including financial statements), the risks of the offering, 
    a description of the securities, and the plan of distribution. For 
    example, the issuer could provide the information required in a Form 
    U-7, as outlined in n.37, to satisfy this requirement.
        \37\ If any state that the issuer intends to make sales in does 
    not provide for the registration or the public filing or delivery of 
    a disclosure document to investors before sale, then in order to be 
    able to issue freely tradable securities and to engage in public 
    solicitation or public advertising, the issuer must register in at 
    least one state with such a procedure. The disclosure document must 
    be delivered before sale to all purchasers, including purchasers in 
    the states that have no registration and delivery procedure. The 
    process does not allow using one state's prospectus in another state 
    where the second state provides a conforming procedure.
        In states that have adopted the Small Corporate Offering 
    Registration (``SCOR'') Review Statement of Policy, information on 
    an issuer is available to investors through Form U-7. The Form U-7 
    contains a series of 50 very detailed questions on the issuer's 
    business, intended use of proceeds, management, principal 
    stockholders, and plan of distribution. In addition, the issuer must 
    file historical financial statements prepared in accordance with 
    generally accepted accounting principles in the United States. Form 
    U-7 has been either formally adopted or recognized and accepted by 
    45 states.
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         If the transaction is effected under a state law exemption 
    that permits general solicitation and general advertising so long as 
    sales are made only to ``accredited investors.'' \38\
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        \38\ Generally, these securities may not be freely transferred 
    under state law. The Model Accredited Investor Exemption provides 
    that any resale of a security sold in reliance of the exemption 
    within 12 months of sale will be presumed to be with a view to 
    distribution and not for investment, a requirement of the exemption, 
    except for limited circumstances. With respect to general 
    solicitation and advertising, the Model Accredited Investor 
    Exemption specifies that only a tombstone ad may be used; however, a 
    few states have no restriction on general solicitation and 
    advertising so long as sales are only made to accredited investors.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        These amendments will be effective April 7, 1999. Rule 504 
    offerings that begin on or after this date will have to comply with the 
    new rule. With respect to Rule 504 offerings that are ongoing at the 
    time of the amendments, issuers will have to discontinue offers and 
    register under a state law requiring the preparation and delivery of a 
    disclosure document to investors before sale in order to issue freely 
    tradable securities.
        The pre-1992 approach strikes an appropriate balance between the 
    needs of legitimate small businesses to issue freely tradable 
    securities to obtain seed capital, while still protecting 
    investors.\39\ The amendments will preserve an avenue for small 
    businesses to issue freely tradable securities and not suffer deep 
    liquidity discounts, while at the same time they will protect investors 
    by curbing the use of Rule 504 securities in connection with fraudulent 
    transactions.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \39\ We have an ongoing dialogue with small business and their 
    representatives. Since September 1996, we have hosted 12 SEC Small 
    Business Town Hall Meetings across the country to discuss issues 
    like our capital formation rules. We learn about the current 
    concerns and problems of small businesses in raising capital in the 
    securities markets so that we can implement programs to meet their 
    needs consistent with the protection of investors. Three meetings 
    have been held since the proposals were issued. At each meeting, we 
    discussed the Rule 504 Proposing Release and encouraged attendees to 
    submit their views as part of the rulemaking process.
        In addition, every year we host the Government-Business Forum on 
    Small Business Capital Formation. In September 1998, we held the 
    Seventeenth Annual Forum in Chicago. The Rule 504 Proposing Release 
    generated significant discussion there as well.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    III. Cost-Benefit Analysis
    
        In the Rule 504 Proposing Release we asked the public for their 
    views on the costs and benefits of the proposal and other supporting 
    information. No commenter provided data on the plan we adopt today.
        We believe that those who will rely on the rule will not have 
    significantly increased costs. In fact, since the rule is essentially 
    being maintained as it has always operated, given the necessity of 
    state law compliance, the vast majority of issuers should have no 
    additional costs of compliance. The main impact will be that issuers 
    who make offerings in states that do not provide for the registration 
    provision dictated by the rule will have to register in another state 
    in order to have a public offering and issue that state's residents 
    freely tradable securities. We understand that issuers who intend to 
    issue securities in New York and the District of Columbia are the only 
    ones that will be affected by this change. We understand that the 
    average cost of preparing and filing a Form U-7 filing is $30,000.\40\ 
    It is because of the mandate of investor protection that we are making 
    this change. Overall, the rule will maintain the benefits that allow 
    small companies to raise ``seed capital'' with a minimal federal 
    compliance scheme for public offerings. Private offerings also are 
    being affected since they will no longer be able to use general 
    solicitation or advertising and securities issued in these offerings 
    will be restricted. The Commission has concluded that the amendments 
    will not result in significant adverse effects on efficiency, 
    competition, or capital formation.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \40\ This estimate is from a 1997 survey conducted by the SCOR 
    Report, a newsletter that covers all aspects of small business 
    finance.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
    IV. Summary of the Final Regulatory Flexibility Analysis
    
        In accordance with 5 U.S.C. Sec. 604, we have prepared a final 
    Regulatory Flexibility Analysis (``FRFA'') regarding the amendments.
        The analysis notes that the amendments to Rule 504 are a result of 
    our view that the current configuration of the exemption may be leading 
    to abuse, as well as concerns expressed to us by representatives of 
    other regulators. The purpose of the revisions is to reduce the 
    potential for abuse and yet maintain the utility of the exemption for 
    small businesses. We have determined that the amendments will enhance 
    the protection of the investing public.
        As the FRFA describes, in calendar year 1998, 2,988 Forms D were 
    filed by 2,499 companies with the Commission claiming the Rule 504 
    exemption. Rule 504 only affects non-reporting companies. The 
    Commission has sought to minimize the reporting burden on small 
    businesses. However, we do not collect data to determine how many of 
    the non-reporting companies filing Form D are small businesses. The 
    amendments will only affect issuers offering and selling in certain 
    jurisdictions. We do not know the number of Rule 504 offerings in these 
    jurisdictions. Therefore, we are unable to determine exactly how many 
    small businesses will be affected by the proposed amendments.
        While it is not possible to know with certainty, it is believed 
    that most of these offerings were done by small businesses. Small 
    businesses affected by the changed rule include those that make a 
    ``public'' offering of securities in one of the jurisdictions that does 
    not require prospectus delivery before sale. The rule changes would 
    require the securities to be registered in a state that requires 
    prospectus delivery before sale or that exempts general solicitations 
    of accredited investors. In the alternative, these companies could use 
    the rule to make a private offering, which could involve their offering 
    a liquidity discount for their shares and thus increase their cost for 
    capital. The Commission has insufficient data to
    
    [[Page 11094]]
    
    reliably quantify the impact on small entities offering such a 
    discount.
        The amendments do not impose any new recordkeeping requirements or 
    require reporting of additional information. The amendments require 
    issuers in certain jurisdictions to register in states they might not 
    otherwise register. We understand that the average cost of a Form U-7 
    filing is $30,000.\41\
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        \41\ See fn. 40, above.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        As discussed more fully in the FRFA, several possible significant 
    alternatives to the proposals were considered. These included 
    establishing different compliance or reporting requirements for small 
    entities, exempting them from all or part of the proposed requirements, 
    or requiring them to provide more disclosure, such as the same 
    disclosure as required for the other Regulation D exemptions. We also 
    considered restricting the resale of these securities. We concluded 
    that the costs of this proprosal exceeded the benefit. The FRFA also 
    indicates that there are no current federal rules that duplicate, 
    overlap, or conflict with the proposed rule amendments.
        We encouraged written comments on any aspect of the initial 
    regulatory flexibility analysis (IRFA), but received no specific 
    comments in response to our request. In particular, we sought comment 
    on: (1) the number of small entities that would be affected by the 
    proposed rule amendments; and (2) the determination that the proposed 
    rule amendments would not increase the reporting, recordkeeping and 
    other compliance requirements for small entities. A copy of the FRFA 
    may be obtained from Twanna M. Young, Office of Small Business, 
    Division of Corporation Finance, Securities and Exchange Commission, 
    450 Fifth Street, NW, Washington, DC 20549.
    
    V. Paperwork Reduction Act
    
        We submitted the initial proposal for review in accordance with the 
    Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995 (``the Act'').\42\ The title to the 
    affected information collection is: ``Form D.'' The specific 
    information that must be included in Form D is explained in the form 
    itself, and relates to the issuer, its principals and the amount of 
    money proposed to be raised along with proposed applications of the 
    proceeds. The information is needed for monitoring use of the exemption 
    as well as evaluating its usefulness. The effect of the rule amendment 
    is to require some issuers to prepare registration and disclosure 
    documents they currently are not required to file.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        \42\ 44 U.S.C. 3501 et seq.
    ---------------------------------------------------------------------------
    
        The collection of information in Form D will continue to be 
    required in order for companies to use the rule for sales of their 
    securities. While we cannot estimate the number of respondents that may 
    use revised Rule 504, in calendar year 1998, there were 2,988 Forms D 
    filed by 2,499 companies with the Commission claiming the Rule 504 
    exemption. We believe that the vast majority of these were private Rule 
    504 offerings. We expect that approximately 2,250 companies each year 
    will be relying on the exemption. With the revisions to Rule 504 the 
    estimated burden for responding to the collection of information in 
    Form D would not increase for most companies because the information 
    required has not been changed. The number of eligible transactions, 
    however, may decrease. We do not know how many issuers currently offer 
    or sell securities pursuant to Rule 504 in states without a requirement 
    to deliver a disclosure document to investors before sale. We estimate 
    that the burden hours per respondent each year will be unchanged at 16. 
    Therefore, we estimate an aggregate of 36,000 burden hours per year.
        The information collection requirements imposed by Form D are 
    mandatory to the extent that a company elects to use the Rule 504 
    exemption. The information will be disclosed to third parties or the 
    public. An agency may not conduct or sponsor, and a person is not 
    required to respond to, a collection of information unless it displays 
    a currently valid control number. The OMB control number is 3235-0076.
        We received no comments in response to our solicitation of comments 
    regarding the information collection obligation.
    
    VI. Statutory Basic, Text of Amendments and Authority
    
        The amendments are made pursuant to Sections 2, 3(b), 6, 7, 8, 10, 
    19(a), 19(c) and 28 of the Securities Act.
    
    List of Subjects in 17 CFR Part 230
    
        Reporting and recordkeeping requirements, Securities.
    
        For the reasons set out in the preamble, title 17, chapter II of 
    the Code of Federal Regulations is amended as follows:
    
    PART 230--GENERAL RULES AND REGULATIONS, SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
    
        1. The authority citation for part 230 continues to read in part as 
    follows:
    
        Authority: 15 U.S.C. 77b, 77f, 77g, 77h, 77j, 77r, 77s, 77sss, 
    78c, 78d, 78l, 78m, 78n, 78o, 78w, 78ll(d), 79t, 80a-8, 80a-24, 80a-
    28, 80a-29, 80a-30, and 80a-37, unless otherwise noted.
    * * * * *
        2. By revising Sec. 230.504(b)(1) to read as follows:
    
    
    Sec. 230.504  Exemption for limited offerings and sales of securities 
    not exceeding $1,000,000.
    
    * * * * *
        (b) Conditions to be met. (1) General conditions. To qualify for 
    exemption under this Sec. 230.504, offers and sales must satisfy the 
    terms and conditions of Secs. 230.501 and 230.502 (a), (c) and (d), 
    except that the provisions of Sec. 230.502 (c) and (d) will not apply 
    to offers and sales of securities under this Sec. 230.504 that are 
    made:
        (i) Exclusively in one or more states that provide for the 
    registration of the securities, and require the public filing and 
    delivery to investors of a substantive disclosure document before sale, 
    and are made in accordance with those state provisions;
        (ii) In one or more states that have no provision for the 
    registration of the securities or the public filing or delivery of a 
    disclosure document before sale, if the securities have been registered 
    in at least one state that provides for such registration, public 
    filing and delivery before sale, offers and sales are made in that 
    state in accordance with such provisions, and the disclosure document 
    is delivered before sale to all purchasers (including those in the 
    states that have no such procedure); or
        (iii) Exclusively according to state law exemptions from 
    registration that permit general solicitation and general advertising 
    so long as sales are made only to ``accredited investors'' as defined 
    in Sec. 230.501(a).
    * * * * *
        Dated: February 25, 1999.
    
        By the Commission.
    Margaret H. McFarland,
    Deputy Secretary.
    [FR Doc. 99-5295 Filed 3-5-99; 8:45 am]
    BILLING CODE 8010-01-U
    
    
    

Document Information

Effective Date:
4/7/1999
Published:
03/08/1999
Department:
Securities and Exchange Commission
Entry Type:
Rule
Action:
Final rule.
Document Number:
99-5295
Dates:
April 7, 1999.
Pages:
11090-11094 (5 pages)
Docket Numbers:
Release No. 33-7644, S7-14-98
RINs:
3235-AH35: Rule 504 of Regulation D
RIN Links:
https://www.federalregister.gov/regulations/3235-AH35/rule-504-of-regulation-d
PDF File:
99-5295.pdf
CFR: (1)
17 CFR 230.504