The Day

SEC opens door to startup investing for all

For investors, it’s a chance to make a small profit and possibly get in early on the next Twitter, Instagram or Uber.

- By MARCY GORDON

Washington — A new form of crowdfundi­ng is coming soon that will allow startups to raise money by selling stock to Main Street investors.

The Securities and Exchange Commission on Friday adopted rules implementi­ng a 2012 law that opened the door to securities crowdfundi­ng. The vote was 3-1 at a public meeting.

For years, artists, charities and entreprene­urs have used the power of the Internet to generate money for projects. Starting in mid-2016, businesses will be able to offer investors a piece of their company by legally selling stock online.

For investors, it’s a chance to make a small profit and possibly get in early on the next Twitter, Instagram or Uber.

But it also entails high risk, given that a majority of startups fail. About half of all small businesses shut down within the first five years. Some critics also warn that investment crowdfundi­ng is ripe for fraud.

The new SEC rules won’t prevent the types of fraud that can arise in convention­al online scams, said Mercer Bullard, a law professor at the University of Mississipp­i who is a mutual-fund investor advocate.

“You can embezzle someone’s money in the guise of making a securities offering,” Bullard said in a telephone interview.

With an eye to protecting investors, the crowdfundi­ng securities offerings can only be made through brokerage firms or new Internet funding portals that must be registered with the SEC. The portals will be expected to provide investors with materials explaining the process, investment limits and resale restrictio­ns. To reduce fraud risks, the portals are charged with vetting the companies and the prospectiv­e investors.

SEC Chair Mary Jo White said before the vote that agency staff “will begin immediatel­y to keep a watchful eye on how this market develops.”

They will assess what kinds of companies use the new crowdfundi­ng offerings, how closely they follow the rules and whether the new practice promotes the raising of capital while also protecting investors.

The SEC proposed the crowdfundi­ng rules two years ago. Waiting at the starting gate for the final rules to take effect: legions of startups in areas such as packaged food, medical and biotechnol­ogy, restaurant­s and real estate.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States