Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Lifts Advertising Ban on Private Offerings: What It Means for Private Equity, Hedge and Venture Capital Funds


On July 10, the SEC adopted a new rule that will permit many private equity funds, hedge funds and venture capital funds to use general advertising and solicitation when offering and selling interests in a fund (the “New Rule”). This is a significant change from existing law. The New Rule will permit a private fund to advertise in any media. Even if a fund decides not to advertise, a fund may find it useful to make its website more accessible to the public, to use social media, and to speak freely at conferences and seminars as well as to the press. Private funds relying on the New Rule may only admit investors that are “accredited investors” and must take “reasonable steps to verify” that the investors are accredited investors. The New Rule will become effective in mid-September (60 days after publication in the Federal Register, the “Effective Date”). Accordingly, funds must wait until the Effective Date before engaging in any general advertising or solicitation.

Background

The New Rule is contained in Rule 506 of Regulation D under the Securities Act of 1933. Most private funds already rely on Regulation D when offering and selling securities. Upon the New Rule’s Effective Date, private funds may engage in general solicitation or advertising going forward. If they do, they must satisfy the following conditions and should consider the “Important Considerations” below.

New Rule Conditions

All investors must be accredited investors.

Accredited investors are individuals who meet certain minimum income or net worth levels, or certain institutions such as trusts, corporations or charitable organizations that meet certain minimum asset levels. Funds relying on the New Rule may not admit any investors who are not accredited investors. Funds that already have non-accredited investors can still rely on the New Rule going forward.

Private funds must take “reasonable steps to verify” that investors are accredited investors

Under the New Rule, it is not sufficient to rely solely on an investor’s representation that the investor is an accredited investor. Otherwise, however, the New Rule does not mandate any specific requirements as to what constitutes “reasonable steps to verify” that investors are accredited investors. Instead, the New Rule provides that the determination of the reasonableness of the steps taken is an objective assessment by the fund, considering the facts and circumstances of the investor and the transaction. The New Rule contains a non-exclusive list of methods that funds may (but are not required to) use to verify that a natural person investor is an accredited investor.

Form D.

A fund must indicate on its “Form D” filed with the SEC in connection with the offering that it is relying on the New Rule.

Important Considerations


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National Law Review, Volume III, Number 193