Under a new Rule 506(d), a company considering an IPO cannot rely on exemptions if certain “covered persons” had a “disqualifying event” after the effective date of the amendments. If such an event occurred prior to
September 23, 2013, it would not lead to disqualification but would have to be disclosed with “reasonable prominence”2 to investors.
Covered persons include directors and certain officers, general partners and managing members of the issuer, as well as individuals compensated for soliciting investors and general partners, directors, officers and managing members of any compensated solicitor involved—collectively, a significant cast of actors.
The IPO Plot Thickens: The SEC Gets Though on "Bad Actors"
1. The IPO Plot Thickens: The SEC Gets Tough
on “Bad Actors”
A LexisNexis® White Paper
2. Highlights
New Headaches
•
Dodd-Frank required the SEC to adopt rules to prohibit use of Rule 506
exemptions under Regulation D for any securities offerings in which
certain felons and other “bad actors” are involved.
•
Companies will need to conduct documented factual inquiries aimed
at gathering an in-depth knowledge of executive officers and others
to determine whether any ineligible individuals may be involved in
an offering.
Here’s what has happened to alter the playbook for many companies on the
verge of going public. The 2010 Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform and
Consumer Protection Act (Dodd-Frank) required the SEC to adopt rules to
prohibit use of Rule 506 exemptions under Regulation D for any securities
offerings in which certain felons and other “bad actors” are involved.
•
New Rule 506(c) stemming from the JOBS Act relates to a special class
of offerings in which the use of general solicitation and advertising is
allowed, provided certain conditions are met.
•
Lawyers could find themselves answering a variety of interpretational
questions, while also addressing other worries related to compliance
with the new rules.
•
Companies should also be prepared for greater regulatory scrutiny
under the provisions.
Introduction
Hollywood, as a metaphor for movies and television in America, is all about
illusion and the suspension of disbelief. Real life, on the other hand, is
generally unscripted and less dramatic. Individuals are understood to be
more nuanced and, well, genuine, compared with those we see depicted on
the big screen. For one thing, they have real-life foibles.
The problem with that latter point, if you’re with a company that’s about to
launch an initial public offering (IPO) under new rules issued by the Securities
and Exchange Commission (SEC), is that some of those “foibles” among your
main characters could lead to serious complications.
Indeed, the provisions could potentially lead to some embarrassing
revelations concerning individuals who, as a consequence of certain
conditions, might be effectively barred from significant capital
market involvement.
The IPO Plot Thickens: The SEC Gets Tough on “Bad Actors”
The rules were to be “substantially similar” to disqualification provisions of
Regulation A, which also applies to small initial public offerings.
As a result, amendments to Regulation D came into effect1 on September 23,
2013, and because they focus on the most frequently used private placement
exemptions from SEC registration—along with some important new
provisions—they are expected to cause added due diligence headaches
for securities market participants.
Covered Persons and Disqualifying Events
Under a new Rule 506(d), a company considering an IPO cannot rely on
exemptions if certain “covered persons” had a “disqualifying event” after the
effective date of the amendments. If such an event occurred prior to
September 23, 2013, it would not lead to disqualification but would have to
be disclosed with “reasonable prominence”2 to investors.
Covered persons include directors and certain officers, general partners
and managing members of the issuer, as well as individuals compensated for
soliciting investors and general partners, directors, officers and managing
members of any compensated solicitor involved—collectively, a significant
cast of actors.
Disqualifying events are also comprehensive by definition. They include
criminal convictions, court injunctions and restraining orders, certain SEC
disciplinary, cease-and-desist and stop orders, and suspension or expulsion
from membership in a self-regulatory organization.
Moreover, issuers are required to exercise “reasonable care” in establishing
that covered persons are not subject to the specified disqualifying events.
That means companies will need to conduct documented factual inquiries
3. aimed at gathering an in-depth knowledge of executive officers and others
to determine whether any bad actors may be involved in an offering.
The SEC has also indicated that for delayed or long-lived offerings,
reasonable care includes updating the factual inquiry, which can include
periodic rechecking of information by various means, “depending on
the circumstances.”
But Wait—There’s More
In addition to the provisions mandated by Dodd-Frank, the SEC also
amended Regulation D to insert a new rule required by the irresistibly named3
2012 Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act. Rule 506(c) created a
special class of offerings in which the use of general solicitation and
advertising in print, social media, websites, radio and other forms of public
communications is allowed, provided certain conditions are met.4
It’s hoped that such a radical new approach will create an even bigger boom
in investment activity for early-stage companies. Given that the existing
Rule 506(b) exemption for private offerings prompted more than $1.3 trillion
in funding in 2012 alone,5 even a small increase in investment could make
2014 a banner year for IPOs.
Reasonable Care and Compliance Vigilance
Even so, lawyers might well find themselves answering a variety of
interpretational questions regarding the large number of potential covered
persons involved in an offering, while also addressing other worries related
to compliance.
For example, a key element of the new SEC rules relies on a favorite weasel
word in the legal profession: “reasonable,” as in companies must exercise
“reasonable care” in vetting covered persons and take “reasonable steps”
to ensure that they raise funding from accredited investors only in
Rule 560(c) offerings.
In the past, companies could rely simply on representations by principals and
investors, whereas the new rules explicitly require heightened due diligence.
The IPO Plot Thickens: The SEC Gets Tough on “Bad Actors”
Additionally, for Rule 506(c) offerings, advertisements will need to be
reviewed carefully to confirm that they are not misleading or do not fail to
disclose material information. Telemarketing and email solicitations have
other laws that govern their use, which requires further compliance vigilance.
Another factor to consider is that a failure to strictly follow the terms of
Rule 506(c) where general solicitation was used leaves no other path to
asserting an exemption from the SEC’s registration requirements. It’s a
high-stakes roll of the dice.
For all that, companies should also be prepared for greater regulatory
scrutiny under the new provisions.
Worth the Price of Admission?
Indeed, even before the rules were implemented, there was concern6 that the
provisions could become “a boon to boiler-room operators, Ponzi schemers,
bucket shops, and garden-variety fraudsters”—in other words, the very types
of characters that Hollywood likes to celebrate in movies such as the Martin
Scorsese-helmed The Wolf of Wall Street.7
The film, starring Leonardo DiCaprio (at his “debaucherous best,” according
to one reviewer), is based on the real-life account of a stockbroker tied to a
major securities fraud case in the 1990s.8 From the trailer alone, one can tell
that the movie is a no-holds-barred depiction of everything that can—and
shouldn’t—go wrong in the securities marketplace.
It remains to be seen whether more such worst-case scenarios play out. In
the meantime, the SEC likely won’t be much amused by Scorsese’s film. It
appears to glorify the kind of fraudulent activity and excesses that regulators
are working hard to eliminate, not least of all by getting tough on bad actors.
Still, for those considering or preparing an IPO under the new rules, the movie
might be worth the price of admission.
That and a few extra dollars for popcorn should serve as a reminder that
entertainment should not be confused with real life. In the latter, indulging in
illusion and the suspension of disbelief can sometimes be serious liabilities.