Title III is the Newest Crowdfinance Option for Private Companies On October 30, 2015, the SEC finalized the rules for securities crowdfunding under Title III of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act of 2012. Title III lets startups raise up to $1 million per year by selling securities exclusively through registered online intermediaries known as crowdfunding portals and broker-dealer offering platforms. And it permits all Americans to invest from $2,000 to $100,000 in those offerings per year, depending on their net worth and income. Title III offerings can launch in spring 2016. This article provides an overview of recent…
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For Nearly Five Decades, Securities Law Allowed Banks with Fewer than 300 Shareholders to “Deregister,” Now, Banks With Under 1200 Shareholders Can Do the Same Under Provisions of the JOBS Act Dina ElBoghdady reports some interesting news this week in the Washington Post: about 100 small banks have stopped reporting financial details about their operations to the SEC since the JOBS Act was enacted in April About 100 small banks have stopped reporting financial details about their operations (e.g., revenue, expenses, executive compensation and trends affecting their businesses, etc.).to the Securities and Exchange Commission since April, when a law was enacted that…