A while back, one of our favorite start-up clients called me and asked me to speak to a potential investor. Paul Efron, a resident of Arizona, wanted to invest in the company's Regulation A offering. However, when he went onto the company’s website to invest, his subscription was rejected. The company was accepting subscriptions from investors in every state but Arizona and Nebraska.
Why Arizona and Nebraska, asked Paul?
The reason was that while federal law and most states’ laws say that a…
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This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding, Regulation, Regulation A, Securities Law, State Law
A while back, one of our favorite start-up clients called me and asked me to speak to a potential investor. Paul Efron, a resident of Arizona, wanted to invest in the company's Regulation A offering. However, when he went onto the company’s website to invest, his subscription was rejected. The company was accepting subscriptions from investors in every state but Arizona and Nebraska.
Why Arizona and Nebraska, asked Paul?
The reason was that while federal law and most states’ laws say that a…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding, Regulation, Regulation A, Securities Law, State Law
A while back, one of our favorite start-up clients called me and asked me to speak to a potential investor. Paul Efron, a resident of Arizona, wanted to invest in the company's Regulation A offering. However, when he went onto the company’s website to invest, his subscription was rejected. The company was accepting subscriptions from investors in every state but Arizona and Nebraska.
Why Arizona and Nebraska, asked Paul?
The reason was that while federal law and most states’ laws say that a…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding, Regulation, Regulation A, Securities Law, State Law
A while back, one of our favorite start-up clients called me and asked me to speak to a potential investor. Paul Efron, a resident of Arizona, wanted to invest in the company's Regulation A offering. However, when he went onto the company’s website to invest, his subscription was rejected. The company was accepting subscriptions from investors in every state but Arizona and Nebraska.
Why Arizona and Nebraska, asked Paul?
The reason was that while federal law and most states’ laws say that a…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding, Regulation, Regulation A, Securities Law, State Law
A while back, one of our favorite start-up clients called me and asked me to speak to a potential investor. Paul Efron, a resident of Arizona, wanted to invest in the company's Regulation A offering. However, when he went onto the company’s website to invest, his subscription was rejected. The company was accepting subscriptions from investors in every state but Arizona and Nebraska.
Why Arizona and Nebraska, asked Paul?
The reason was that while federal law and most states’ laws say that a…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding, Regulation, Regulation A, Securities Law, State Law
A while back, one of our favorite start-up clients called me and asked me to speak to a potential investor. Paul Efron, a resident of Arizona, wanted to invest in the company's Regulation A offering. However, when he went onto the company’s website to invest, his subscription was rejected. The company was accepting subscriptions from investors in every state but Arizona and Nebraska.
Why Arizona and Nebraska, asked Paul?
The reason was that while federal law and most states’ laws say that a…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding, Regulation, Regulation A, Securities Law, State Law
For some reason, this issue has been coming up a lot lately. Our usual response to the question “Can non-US issuers make a Reg A or Reg CF offering?” is to point to the rules:
Rule 251(b)(1) says Reg A can only be used by “an entity organized under the laws of the United States or Canada, or any State, Province, Territory or possession thereof, or the District of Columbia, with its principal place of business in the United States or Canada.”
Reg CF Rule 100(b) says Reg CF may not be used by…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding Conditions, Financial Statements, Regulation A, Section 4(a)(6), Securities Law, Types of Offerings
For some reason, this issue has been coming up a lot lately. Our usual response to the question “Can non-US issuers make a Reg A or Reg CF offering?” is to point to the rules:
Rule 251(b)(1) says Reg A can only be used by “an entity organized under the laws of the United States or Canada, or any State, Province, Territory or possession thereof, or the District of Columbia, with its principal place of business in the United States or Canada.”
Reg CF Rule 100(b) says Reg CF may not be used by…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding Conditions, Financial Statements, Regulation A, Section 4(a)(6), Securities Law, Types of Offerings
For some reason, this issue has been coming up a lot lately. Our usual response to the question “Can non-US issuers make a Reg A or Reg CF offering?” is to point to the rules:
Rule 251(b)(1) says Reg A can only be used by “an entity organized under the laws of the United States or Canada, or any State, Province, Territory or possession thereof, or the District of Columbia, with its principal place of business in the United States or Canada.”
Reg CF Rule 100(b) says Reg CF may not be used by…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding Conditions, Financial Statements, Regulation A, Section 4(a)(6), Securities Law, Types of Offerings
For some reason, this issue has been coming up a lot lately. Our usual response to the question “Can non-US issuers make a Reg A or Reg CF offering?” is to point to the rules:
Rule 251(b)(1) says Reg A can only be used by “an entity organized under the laws of the United States or Canada, or any State, Province, Territory or possession thereof, or the District of Columbia, with its principal place of business in the United States or Canada.”
Reg CF Rule 100(b) says Reg CF may not be used by…
This entry is filed under Capital Raising, Crowdfunding Conditions, Financial Statements, Regulation A, Section 4(a)(6), Securities Law, Types of Offerings