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Q&A: Small Business
and the SEC
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A guide to help you understand how to raise
capital
and comply with the federal securities laws
A publication of the
Office of Small Business
Division of Corporation Finance
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission
prepared in cooperation with the
Office of the Chief Counsel for Advocacy
U.S. Small Business Administration
April 1997
Table of Contents
- What
Are the Federal Securities Laws?
- How
Can I Get Answers to My Questions?
- Should
My Company "Go Public"?
- How
Does My Small Business Register a Public Offering?
- If
My Company Becomes Public, What Disclosures Must I Regularly Make?
- Are
There Legal Ways To Offer and Sell Securities Without Registering
With the SEC?
- Are
There State Law Requirements in Addition to Federal Ones?
- What
Resources are Available Through the U.S. Small Business Administration?
- Where
Can I Go for More Information?
- How
Can We Improve This Guide?
What Are the Federal Securities
Laws?
In the chaotic securities markets of the 1920s,
companies often sold stocks and bonds on the basis of glittering promises
of fantastic profits -without disclosing any meaningful information
to investors. These conditions contributed to the disastrous Stock Market
Crash of 1929. In response, the U.S. Congress enacted the federal securities
laws and created the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to administer
them.
There are two primary sets of federal laws that
come into play when a company wants to offer and sell its securities
to the public. They are:
- the Securities Act of 1933 (Securities Act),
and
- the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (Exchange
Act).
Securities Act
The Securities Act generally requires companies
to give investors "full disclosure" of all "material
facts," the facts investors would find important in making an investment
decision. This Act also requires companies to file a registration statement
with the SEC that includes information for investors. The SEC does not
evaluate the merits of offerings, or determine if the securities offered
are "good" investments. The SEC staff reviews registration
statements and declares them "effective" if companies satisfy
our disclosure rules. We describe this process in more detail below
.
Exchange Act
The Exchange Act requires publicly held companies
to disclose information continually about their business operations,
financial conditions, and managements. These companies, and in many
cases their officers, directors and significant shareholders, must file
periodic reports or other disclosure documents with the SEC. In some
cases, the company must deliver the information directly to investors.
We discuss these obligations more fully below
.
Exemptions
Your company may
be exempt from these registration and reporting requirements.
How Can I Get Answers to
My Questions?
The SEC tries to meet the needs of small business
through its rules and regulations. It also offers informal guidance
by answering your questions over the phone, through the mail or by e-mail.
The SEC offers you a number of ways to express your views and get help
from the staff. Of course, you should always retain competent counsel
before engaging in any securities offering.
Special Ombudsman to Serve
You
In 1996, we appointed a Special Ombudsman for Small
Business to serve you and to represent the concerns of smaller companies
within the SEC. You can tell the Ombudsman your concerns about any SEC
proposal or rule. The Ombudsman also can answer your general questions
or help you find the answers to your specific questions. The Ombudsman's
telephone number is (202) 942-2950; you can also direct electronic mail
to the ombudsman at e-prospectus@sec.gov.
The Office of Small Business
The Division of Corporation Finance's Office of
Small Business directs the SEC's small business rulemaking initiatives
and comments on SEC rule proposals affecting small companies. Its staff
works with Congressional committees, government agencies, and other
groups concerned with small business. The Office also specializes in
the review of filings from small companies. Its telephone number is
(202) 942-2950.
Town Hall Meetings
The Office of Small Business also sponsors small
business town hall meetings across the country. These meetings help
the SEC convey basic information to small businesses and learn more
about the problems small businesses face in raising capital. These meetings
help the SEC design programs that meet small businesses' needs while
protecting investors.
Government-Business Forum
on Small Business Capital Formation
In addition to the town hall meetings, the SEC sponsors
the Government-Business Forum on Small Business Capital Formation. This
annual meeting provides the only national forum for small businesses
to let government officials from different parts of the federal government
know how the laws, rules and regulations impact the ability of small
companies to raise capital. You can get more information about this
forum from the Office of Small Business.
Internet Web Site
We also maintain a home page on the World Wide Web
(http://www.sec.gov). Our site includes
recent SEC releases and other updating information of interest to small
companies. Through our Web site, small companies and investors can also
find documents publicly filed on the SEC's Electronic Data Gathering,
Analysis, and Retrieval (EDGAR)
system. Most registration statements and other documents must now be
filed electronically via that system.
Should My Company "Go
Public"?
When your company needs additional capital, "going
public" may be the right choice, but you should weigh your options
carefully. If your company is in the very early stages of development,
it may be better to seek loans from financial institutions or the Small
Business Administration. Other alternatives include raising money by
selling securities in transactions that are exempt from the registration
process. We discuss these alternatives later.
There are benefits and new obligations that come
from raising capital through a public offering registered with the SEC.
While the benefits are attractive, be sure you are ready to assume these
new obligations:
Benefits
- Your access to capital will increase, since you
can contact more potential investors.
- Your company may become more widely known.
- You may obtain financing more easily in the future
if investor interest in your company grows enough to sustain a secondary
trading market in your securities.
- Controlling shareholders, such as the company's
officers or directors, may have a ready market for their shares, which
means that they can more easily sell their interests at retirement,
for diversification, or for some other reason.
- Your company may be able to attract and retain
more highly qualified personnel if it can offer stock options, bonuses,
or other incentives with a known market value.
- The image of your company may be improved.
New Obligations
- You must continue to keep shareholders informed
about the company's business operations, financial condition, and
management, incurring additional costs and new legal obligations.
- You may be liable if you do not fulfill these
new legal obligations.
- You may lose some flexibility in managing your
company's affairs, particularly when shareholders must approve your
actions.
- Your public offering will take time and money
to accomplish.
How Does My Small Business
Register
a Public Offering?
If you decide on a registered public offering, the
Securities Act requires your company to file a registration statement
with the SEC before the company can offer its securities for sale. You
cannot actually sell the securities covered by the registration statement
until the SEC staff declares it "effective," even though registration
statements become public immediately upon filing.
Registration statements have two principal parts:
- Part I is the prospectus, the legal offering
or "selling" document. Your company -the "issuer"
of the securities -must describe in the prospectus the important facts
about its business operations, financial condition, and management.
Everyone who buys the new issue, as well as anyone who is made an
offer to purchase the securities, must have access to the prospectus.
- Part II contains additional information that
the company does not have to deliver to investors. Anyone can see
this information by requesting it from one of the SEC's public reference
rooms or by looking it up on the SEC Web site.
The Basic Registration Form
- Form S-1
All companies can use Form S-1 to register their
securities offerings. You should not prepare a registration statement
as a fill-in-the-blank form, like a tax return. It should be similar
to a brochure, providing readable information. If you file this form,
your company must describe each of the following in the prospectus:
- its business;
- its properties;
- its competition;
- the identity of its officers and directors and
their compensation;
- material transactions between the company and
its officers and directors;
- material legal proceedings involving the company
or its officers and directors;
- the plan for distributing the securities; and
- the intended use of the proceeds of the offering.
Information about how to describe these items is
set out in SEC rules. Registration statements also must include financial
statements audited by an independent certified public accountant.
In addition to the information expressly required
by the form, your company must also provide any other information that
is necessary to make your disclosure complete and not misleading. You
also must clearly describe any risks prominently in the prospectus,
usually at the beginning. Examples of these risk factors are:
- lack of business operating history;
- adverse economic conditions in a particular industry;
- lack of a market for the securities offered;
and
- dependence upon key personnel.
Alternative Registration Forms
for Small Business Issuers
If your company qualifies as a "small business
issuer," it can choose to file its registration statement using
one of the simplified small business forms. A small business issuer
is a United States or Canadian issuer:
- that had less than $25 million in revenues in
its last fiscal year, and
- whose outstanding publicly-held stock is worth
no more than $25 million.
Form SB-1 - To Raise $10
Million or Less
Small business issuers offering up to $10 million
worth of securities in any 12-month period may use Form SB-1. This form
allows you to provide information in a question and answer format, similar
to that used in Regulation A offerings, a type of exempt offering discussed
below.
Unlike Regulation A filings, Form SB-1 requires audited financial statements.
Form SB-2 - To Raise Capital
in Any Amount
If your company is a "small business issuer,"
it may register an unlimited dollar amount of securities using Form
SB-2, and may use this form again and again so long as it satisfies
the "small business issuer" definition. One advantage of Form-2
is that all its disclosure requirements are in Regulation-B, a set of
rules written in simple, non-legalistic terminology. Form SB-2 also
permits the company to:
- Provide audited financial statements, prepared
according to generally accepted accounting principles, for two fiscal
years. In contrast, Form S-1 requires the issuer to provide audited
financial statements, prepared according to more detailed SEC regulations,
for three fiscal years; and
- Include less extensive narrative disclosure than
Form S-1 requires, particularly in the description of your business,
and executive compensation.
Companies have used the small business forms in
dramatically increasing numbers since we revised the forms in 1992:
Staff Review of Registration
Statements
SEC staff examines registration statements for compliance
with disclosure requirements. If a filing appears incomplete or inaccurate,
the staff usually informs the company by letter. The company may file
correcting or clarifying amendments. Once the company has satisfied
the disclosure requirements, the staff declares the registration statement
effective. The company may then begin to sell its securities. The SEC
can refuse or suspend the effectiveness of any registration statement
if it concludes that the document is misleading, inaccurate, or incomplete.
If My Company Becomes Public,
What Disclosures
Must I Regularly Make?
Your company can become "public" in one
of two ways - by issuing securities in an offering registered under
the Securities Act or by registering the company's outstanding securities
under Exchange Act requirements. Both types of registration trigger
ongoing reporting obligations for your company. In some cases, the Exchange
Act also subjects your company's officers, directors and significant
shareholders to reporting requirements. Let's discuss these requirements
individually.
Reporting obligations because
of Securities Act registration
Once the staff declares your company's Securities
Act registration statement effective, the Exchange Act requires you
to file reports with the SEC. The obligation to file reports continues
at least through the end of the fiscal year in which your registration
statement becomes effective. After that, you are required to continue
reporting unless you satisfy the following "thresholds," in
which case your filing obligations are suspended:
- your company has fewer than 300 shareholders
of the class of securities offered; or
- your company has fewer than 500 shareholders
of the class of securities offered and less than $10 million in total
assets for each of its last three fiscal years.
If your company is subject to the reporting requirements,
it must file information with the SEC about:
- its operations;
- its officers, directors, and certain shareholders
(including salary, various fringe benefits, and transactions between
the company and management);
- the financial condition of the business (including
financial statements audited by an independent certified public accountant);
and
- its competitive position and material terms of
contracts or lease agreements.
All of this information becomes publicly available
when you file your reports with the SEC. As is true with Securities
Act filings, small business issuers may choose to use small business
alternative forms and Regulation S-B for registration and reporting
under the Exchange Act.
Obligations because of Exchange
Act registration
Even if your company has not registered a securities
offering, it must file an Exchange Act registration statement if:
- it has more than $10 million total assets and
a class of equity securities (like common stock) with 500 or more
shareholders; or
- it lists its securities on an exchange or on
Nasdaq.
If a class of your company's securities is registered
under the Exchange Act, the company, as well as its shareholders and
management, are subject to various reporting requirements, explained
below.
Ongoing Exchange Act periodic
reporting
If your company registers a class of securities
under the Exchange Act, it must file the same annual, periodic, and
current reports that are required as a result of Securities Act registration,
as explained above. This obligation continues for as long as the company
exceeds the reporting thresholds previously
outlined. If your company's securities are traded on an exchange
or on Nasdaq, the company must continue filing these reports as long
as the securities trade on those markets, even if your company falls
below the thresholds.
Proxy rules
A company with Exchange Act registered securities
must comply with the SEC's proxy rules whenever it seeks a shareholder
vote on corporate matters. These rules require the company to provide
a proxy statement to its shareholders, together with a proxy card when
soliciting proxies. Proxy statements discuss management and executive
compensation, along with descriptions of the matters up for a vote.
If the company is not soliciting proxies but will take a vote on a matter,
the company must provide to its shareholders an information statement
that is similar to a proxy statement. The proxy rules also require your
company to send an annual report to shareholders if there will be an
election of directors. These reports contain much of the same information
found in the Exchange Act annual reports that a company must file with
the SEC, including audited financial statements. The proxy rules also
govern when your company must provide shareholder lists to investors
and when it must include a shareholder proposal in the proxy statement.
Beneficial ownership reports
If your company has registered a class of its equity
securities under the Exchange Act, persons who acquire more than five
percent of the outstanding shares of that class must file beneficial
owner reports until their holdings drop below five percent. These filings
contain background information about the beneficial owners as well as
their investment intentions, providing investors and the company with
information about accumulations of securities that may potentially change
or influence company management and policies.
Tender offers
A public company with Exchange Act registered securities
that faces a takeover attempt, or third party tender offer, should be
aware that the SEC's tender offer rules will apply to the transaction.
The same is true if the company makes a tender offer for its own Exchange
Act registered securities. The filings required by these rules provide
information to the public about the person making the tender offer.
The company that is the subject of the takeover must file with the SEC
its responses to the tender offer. The rules also set time limits for
the tender offer and provide other protections to shareholders.
Transaction reporting by
officers, directors and ten percent shareholders
Section 16 of the Exchange Act applies to your company's
directors and officers, as well as shareholders who own more than 10%
of a class of your company's equity securities registered under the
Exchange Act. It requires these persons to report their transactions
involving the company's equity securities to the SEC. Section 16 also
establishes mechanisms for a company to recover "short swing"
profits, those profits an insider realizes from a purchase and sale
of a company security within a six-month period. In addition, Section
16 prohibits short selling by these persons of any class of the company's
securities (whether or not that class is registered under the Exchange
Act).
Are There Legal Ways To
Offer and Sell Securities
Without Registering With the SEC?
Yes! Your company's securities offering may qualify
for one of several exemptions from the registration requirements. We
explain the most common ones below. You must remember, however, that
all securities transactions, even exempt transactions, are subject to
the antifraud provisions of the federal securities laws. This means
that you and your company will be responsible for false or misleading
statements (whether oral or written). The government enforces the federal
securities laws through criminal, civil and administrative proceedings.
Some enforcement proceedings are brought through private law suits.
Also, if all conditions of the exemptions are not met, purchasers may
be able to obtain refunds of their purchase price. In addition, offerings
that are exempt from provisions of the federal securities laws may still
be subject to the notice and filing obligations of various state laws.
Make sure you check with the appropriate state securities administrator
before proceeding with your offering.
Intrastate Offering Exemption
Section 3(a)(11) of the Securities Act is generally
known as the "intrastate offering exemption." This exemption
facilitates the financing of local business operations. To qualify for
the intrastate offering exemption, your company must:
- be incorporated in the state where it is offering
the securities;
- carry out a significant amount of its business
in that state; and
- make offers and sales only to residents of that
state.
There is no fixed limit on the size of the offering
or the number of purchasers. Your company must determine the residence
of each purchaser. If any of the securities are offered or sold to even
one out-of-state person, the exemption may be lost. Without the exemption,
the company could be in violation of the Securities Act registration
requirements. If a purchaser resells any of the securities to a person
who resides outside the state within a short period of time after the
company's offering is complete (the usual test is nine months), the
entire transaction, including the original sales, might violate the
Securities Act. Since secondary markets for these securities rarely
develop, companies often must sell securities in these offerings at
a discount.
It will be difficult for your company to rely on
the intrastate exemption unless you know the purchasers and the sale
is directly negotiated with them. If your company holds some of its
assets outside the state, or derives a substantial portion of its revenues
outside the state where it proposes to offer its securities, it will
probably have a difficult time qualifying for the exemption.
You may follow Rule 147, a "safe harbor"
rule, to ensure that you meet the requirements for this exemption. It
is possible, however, that transactions not meeting all requirements
of Rule 147 may still qualify for the exemption.
Private Offering Exemption
Section 4(2) of the Securities Act exempts from
registration "transactions by an issuer not involving any public
offering." To qualify for this exemption, the purchasers of the
securities must:
- have enough knowledge and experience in finance
and business matters to evaluate the risks and merits of the investment
(the "sophisticated investor"), or be able to bear the investment's
economic risk;
- have access to the type of information normally
provided in a prospectus; and
- agree not to resell or distribute the securities
to the public.
In addition, you may not use any form of public
solicitation or general advertising in connection with the offering.
The precise limits of this private offering exemption
are uncertain. As the number of purchasers increases and their relationship
to the company and its management becomes more remote, it is more difficult
to show that the transaction qualifies for the exemption. You should
know that if you offer securities to even one person who does not meet
the necessary conditions, the entire offering may be in violation of
the Securities Act.
Rule 506, another "safe harbor" rule,
provides objective standards that you can rely on to meet the requirements
of this exemption. Rule 506 is a part of Regulation which we describe
more fully elsewhere.
Regulation A
Section 3(b) of the Securities Act authorizes the
SEC to exempt from registration small securities offerings. By this
authority, we created Regulation A, an exemption for public offerings
not exceeding $5 million in any 12-month period. If you choose to rely
on this exemption, your company must file an offering statement (consisting
of a notification, offering circular, and exhibits) with the SEC for
review.
Regulation A offerings share many characteristics
with registered offerings. For example, you must provide purchasers
with an offering circular that is similar in content to a prospectus.
Like registered offerings, the securities can be offered publicly and
are not "restricted," meaning they are freely tradeable in
the secondary market after the offering. The principal advantages of
Regulation A offerings, as opposed to full registration, are:
- The financial statements are simpler and don't
need to be audited;
- There are no Exchange Act reporting obligations
after the offering unless the company has more than $10 million in
total assets and more than 500 shareholders;
- Companies may choose among three formats to prepare
the offering circular, one of which is a simplified question-and-answer
document; and
- You may "test the waters" to determine
if there is adequate interest in your securities before going through
the expense of filing with the SEC.
All types of companies which do not report under
the Exchange Act may use Regulation A, except "blank check"
companies, those with an unspecified business, and investment companies
registered or required to be registered under the Investment Company
Act of 1940. In most cases, shareholders may use Regulation A to resell
up to $1.5 million of securities.
If you "test the waters," you can use
general solicitation and advertising prior to filing an offering statement
with the SEC, giving you the advantage of determining whether there
is enough market interest in your securities before you incur
the full range of legal, accounting, and other costs associated with
filing an offering statement. You may not, however, solicit or accept
money until the SEC staff completes its review of the filed offering
statement and you deliver prescribed offering materials to investors.
Regulation D
Regulation D establishes three exemptions from Securities
Act registration. Let's address each one separately.
Rule 504
Rule 504 provides an exemption for the offer and
sale of up to $1,000,000 of securities in a 12-month period. Your company
may use this exemption so long as it is not a blank check company and
is not subject to Exchange Act reporting requirements. Some of the most
important characteristics of a Rule 504 offering are:
- You can sell securities to an unlimited number
of persons;
- You can use general solicitation or advertising
to market the securities; and
- Purchasers receive securities that are not "restricted."
This means that they may sell their securities in the open market
without registration or other sales limits imposed on privately placed
securities.
Rule 504 does not require issuers to give disclosure
documents to investors. Nonetheless, you should take care to provide
sufficient information to investors to avoid violating the antifraud
provisions of the securities laws. This means that any information you
provide to investors must be free from false or misleading statements.
Similarly, you should not exclude any information if the omission makes
what you do provide investors false or misleading.
Rule 505
Rule 505 provides an exemption for offers and sales
of securities totaling up to $5 million in any 12-month period. Under
this exemption, you may sell to an unlimited number of "accredited
investors" and up to 35 other persons (who do not need to satisfy
the sophistication or wealth standards associated with other exemptions).
Purchasers must buy for investment only, and not for resale. The issued
securities are "restricted." Consequently, you must inform
investors that they may not sell for at least a year without registering
the transaction. You may not use general solicitation or advertising
to sell the securities.
An "accredited investor" is:
- a bank, insurance company, registered investment
company, business development company, or small business investment
company;
- an employee benefit plan (within the meaning
of the Employee Retirement Income Security Act) if a bank, insurance
company, or registered investment adviser makes the investment decisions,
or if the plan has total assets in excess of $5 million;
- a charitable organization, corporation or partnership
with assets exceeding $5 million;
- a director, executive officer, or general partner
of the company selling the securities;
- a business in which all the equity owners are
accredited investors;
- a natural person with a net worth of at least
$1 million;
- a natural person with income exceeding $200,000
in each of the two most recent years or joint income with a spouse
exceeding $300,000 for those years and a reasonable expectation of
the same income level in the current year; or
- a trust with assets of at least $5 million, not
formed to acquire the securities offered, and whose purchases are
directed by a sophisticated person.
It is up to you to decide what information you give
to accredited investors, so long as it does not violate the antifraud
prohibitions. But you must give non-accredited investors disclosure
documents that generally are the same as those used in registered offerings.
If you provide information to accredited investors, you must make this
information available to the non-accredited investors as well. You must
also be available to answer questions by prospective purchasers.
Here are some specifics about the financial statement
requirements applicable to this type of offering:
- Only financial statements for the most recent
fiscal year need be certified by an independent public accountant;
- If a company other than a limited partnership
cannot obtain audited financial statements without unreasonable effort
or expense, only the company's balance sheet (to be dated within 120
days of the start of the offering) must be audited; and
- Limited partnerships unable to obtain required
financial statements without unreasonable effort or expense may furnish
audited financial statements prepared under the federal income tax
laws.
Rule 506
As we discussed earlier, Rule 506 is a "safe
harbor" for the private offering exemption. If your company satisfies
the following standards, you can be assured that you are within the
Section 4(2) exemption:
- You can raise an unlimited amount of capital;
- You cannot use general solicitation or advertising
to market the securities;
- You can sell securities to an unlimited number
of accredited investors (the same group we identified in the Rule
505 discussion) and up to 35 other purchasers. Unlike Rule 505, all
non-accredited investors (either alone or with a purchaser representative)
must be sophisticated-is, they must have sufficient knowledge and
experience in financial and business matters to make them capable
of evaluating the merits and risks of the prospective investment;
- It is up to you to decide what information you
give to accredited investors, so long as it does not violate the antifraud
prohibitions. But you must give non-accredited investors disclosure
documents that generally are the same as those used in registered
offerings. If you provide information to accredited investors, you
must make this information available to the non-accredited investors
as well;
- You must be available to answer questions by
prospective purchasers;
- Financial statement requirements are the same
as for Rule 505; and
- Purchasers receive "restricted" securities.
Consequently, purchasers may not freely trade the securities in the
secondary market after the offering.
Accredited Investor Exemption
- Section 4(6)
Section 4(6) of the Securities Act exempts from
registration offers and sales of securities to accredited investors
when the total offering price is less than $5 million.
The definition of accredited investors is the same
as that used in Regulation D. Like the exemptions in Rule 505 and 506,
this exemption does not permit any form of advertising or public solicitation.
There are no document delivery requirements. Of course, all transactions
are subject to the antifraud provisions of the securities laws.
California Limited Offering
Exemption - Rule 1001
SEC Rule 1001 provides an exemption from the registration
requirements of the Securities Act for offers and sales of securities,
in amounts of up to $5 million, that satisfy the conditions of §25102(n)
of the California Corporations Code. This California law exempts from
California state law registration offerings made by California companies
to "qualified purchasers" whose characteristics are similar
to, but not the same as, accredited investors under Regulation D. This
exemption allows some methods of general solicitation prior to sales.
Exemption for Sales of Securities
through Employee Benefit Plans - Rule 701
The SEC adopted Rule 701 to exempt offers and sales
of securities if made to compensate employees. This exemption is available
only to companies that are not subject to Exchange Act reporting requirements,
and is limited to offers and sales of $5or less. The amount that a company
may offer or sell under this exemption may be limited further depending
on factors such as the amount of company assets, the number of the company's
outstanding securities and previous securities sales. Employees receive
"restricted securities" in these transactions and may not
freely offer or sell them to the public.
Are There State Law Requirements
in Addition to Federal Ones?
The federal government and state governments each
have their own securities laws and regulations. If your company is selling
securities, it must comply with federal and state securities
laws. If a particular offering is exempt under the federal securities
laws, that does not necessarily mean that it is exempt from any of the
state laws.
Historically, most state legislatures have followed
one of two approaches in regulating public offerings of securities,
or a combination of the two approaches. Some states review small businesses'
securities offerings to ensure that companies disclose to investors
all information needed to make an informed investment decision. Other
states also analyze public offerings using substantive standards to
assure that the terms and structure of the offerings are fair to investors,
in addition to the focus on disclosure.
To facilitate small business capital formation,
the North American Securities Administrators Association ("NASAA"),
in conjunction with the American Bar Association, developed the Small
Corporate Offering Registration ("SCOR"). SCOR is a simplified
"question and answer" registration form that companies also
can use as the disclosure document for investors. SCOR was primarily
designed for state registration of small business securities offerings
conducted under the SEC's Rule
504, for sale of securities up to $1,000,000. Currently, more
than 40 states recognize SCOR. To assist small business issuers in completing
the SCOR Form, NASAA has developed a detailed "Issuer's
Manual."
In addition, a small company can use the SCOR Form
to satisfy many of the filing requirements of the SEC's Regulation
A exemption, for sales of securities of up to $5,000,000, since
the company may file it with the SEC as part of the Regulation A offering
statement.
To assist small businesses, some states coordinate
SCOR or Regulation A filings through a program called "Regional
Review." Regional Reviews are available in the New England states,
several western states, and many midwestern states.
Companies seeking additional information on SCOR,
Regional Reviews or the "Issuer's Manual" should contact NASAA.
What Resources Are Available
Through
the U.S. Small Business Administration?
When assessing your capital needs, you should consider
programs offered through the U.S. Small Business Administration (SBA).
Congress established the SBA in 1953 to aid, counsel, and protect the
interests of the Nation's small business community. The SBA accomplishes
this in part by working with intermediaries, banks, and other lending
institutions to provide loans and venture capital financing to small
businesses unable to secure financing through normal lending channels.
The SBA offers financing through the programs listed below.
7(a) Loan Guaranty Program:
This is the SBA's primary lending program and was
designed to meet the majority of the small business lending community's
financing needs. In addition to general financing, the 7(a) program
also encompasses a number of specialized loan programs. The following
are a few of the many specialized loan programs:
Low Doc
This program is designed to increase the availability
of funds under $100,000 and streamline or expedite the loan review process.
CAPLines
An umbrella program to help small businesses meet
their short-term and cyclical working-capital needs with five separate
programs.
International Trade
If your business is preparing to engage in or is
already engaged in international trade, or is adversely affected by
competition from imports, the International Trade Loan Program is for
you; and
DELTA
Defense Loan and Technical Assistance is a joint
SBA and Department of Defense effort to provide financial and technical
assistance to defense-dependent small firms adversely affected by cutbacks
in defense.
Microloan Program
This program works through intermediaries to provide
small loans from as little as $100 up to $25,000.
Certified Development Company
(504 Loan) Program
This program, commonly referred to as the 504 program,
makes long term loans available for purchasing land, buildings, machinery
and equipment, and for building, modernizing or renovating existing
facilities and sites.
Small Business Investment
Company Program
Small Business Investment Companies (SBICs), which
the SBA licenses and regulates, are privately-owned and managed investment
firms that provide venture capital and start-up financing to small businesses.
To find additional information on these and other
financial programs please contact your local SBA District Office (call
1-800-8-ASK-SBA for the nearest office) or look on SBA's Web site (http://www.sbaonline.sba.gov).
Additional Financial Resources
and Information from the SBA's Office of Advocacy
Angel Capital Electronic
Network (ACE-Net)
The Office of Advocacy of SBA has established an
Internet site where small companies may list their Regulation A and
Regulation D 504/SCOR stock offerings. ACE-Net is a cooperative effort
between SBA and nine universities, state-based entities, and other non-profit
organizations to provide a listing service where small companies may
list their stock offering for review by high net worth investors (accredited
investors). In addition, ACE-Net anticipates providing mentoring and
educational services for small companies needing business planning and
securities information. You can find the ACE-Net Internet site at the
following URL: http://www.sbaonline.sba.gov/ADVO/acenet.html.
Small Business Lending in the
United States
The Office of Advocacy of SBA has ranked the nearly
10,000 banks in the country on a state-by-state basis to determine which
banks are "small business friendly." The state-by-state directory
helps small businesses locate which banks in their area are more likely
to lend to small business. The directory is available over the Internet
at: http://sba.gov/ADVO/stats.
Where Can I Go for More Information?
The staff of the SEC's Office of Small Business
and the SEC's Small Business Ombudsman will be glad to assist you with
any questions you may have regarding federal securities laws. For information
about state securities laws, contact NASAA or your state's securities
administrator, whose office is usually located in your capital city.
The entire text of the SEC's rules and regulations
is available through the U.S. Government Printing Office or from several
private publishers of legal information. In addition, numerous books
on this subject have been published, and some are available at public
libraries. As of this writing, the following volumes of Title 17 of
the Code of Federal Regulations (the SEC's rules and regulations) were
available from the Government Printing Office:
- Vol. II -Parts 200 to 239. SEC Organization;
Conduct and Ethics; Information and Requests; Rules of Practice; Regulation
S-X and Securities Act of 1933.
- Vol III -Parts 240 to End. Securities Exchange
Act of 1934; Public Utility Holding Company, Trust Indenture, Investment
Company, Investment Advisers, and Securities Investor Protection Corporation
Acts.
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