Nov 2012
In addition, the Proposed Rule appears to misconstrue Section 201 as a mandate to remove any and all regulation of such general solicitation. However, the statute and legislative history reflect the intent to only remove the prohibition on general solicitation. Congress could have removed from the Commission any authority to condition, limit, or otherwise regulate the manner or substance of general solicitation. Instead, Congress clearly elected to allow the Commission to retain its authority to regulate this new allowance for general solicitation in offerings exempt from registration pursuant to Rule 506 or Rule 144A. As such, we believe that the Proposed Rule should be significantly revised to provide clear, objective, and meaningful regulation of the manner and substance of general solicitations that may be allowed in private offerings.
In providing a solid regulatory framework within which to permit general solicitation regarding certain private offerings, the Commission should distinguish between issuers that engage in operational businesses and those that are merely investment vehicles.
Section 201 removes the long-standing ban on general solicitation and advertising in some so-called "private" offerings. Yet, because the total dollars raised by these types of offerings now exceeds the dollars raised through registered offerings, how the Commission implements the changes to such offerings in Section 201 is critically important.