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Financing, Investor Protection And Online Securities Offerings

Financing, Investor Protection And Online Securities Offerings. Chapter 21. Corporate Financing. Stock - An equity security that represents the purchase of a share of ownership in a corporation by a shareholder. Corporate Financing. Common Stock

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Financing, Investor Protection And Online Securities Offerings

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  1. Financing, Investor ProtectionAnd Online Securities Offerings Chapter 21

  2. Corporate Financing • Stock - An equity security that represents the purchase of a share of ownership in a corporation by a shareholder.

  3. Corporate Financing • Common Stock • Shareholder has a proportionate interest in the corporate with regard to voting, earnings, and net assets. • Last to Receive Dividends or Surplus on Dissolution

  4. Corporate Financing • Preferred Stock • Shares with priority over common stock for payment of dividends and distribution of assets on dissolution. • May pay fixed dividend • May not have voting rights

  5. Corporate Financing • Bond - A debt security that represents borrowing by the corporation, in accordance with a bond indenture—a contract between the issuing corporation and the bondholder. - Priority right to return of capital - Fixed or variable interest rate

  6. Bonds

  7. Bonds v. Stocks

  8. Securities Laws • Security - A stock certificate, bond, note, debenture, warrant, or other document given as evidence of ownership in a corporation or as a promise of repayment by a corporation. • “Passive Investment” (efforts of others) • Common Enterprise • Violation of securities laws include both criminal and civil penalties

  9. Securities Act of 1933 • Governs the initial sale of stock by businesses • Put in place in response to the stock market crash of 1929 to prevent fraud in the issuance of securities by requiring disclosure of information to the public

  10. Registration Statement • Generally, a security must by registered before it is offered for sale to the public either through the mails or other facility of interstate commerce, including stock exchanges. • Requires filing a registration statement (and prospectus which will be later distrubuted to investors) with the SEC

  11. Registration Statement • The registration statement must include a description of the following: • Properties and business activities • Directors and officers, their compensation, securities holdings, and other benefits • Pending lawsuits • Financial Statements • Description of risks

  12. Exempt Securities • Securities issued by states or local governments • Securities of Charitable Organizations • Commercial paper maturing in nine months or less • Insurance contracts • Instruments issued by banks

  13. Exempt Transactions • Rule 504 - Offerings by certain companies of up to $1 million per year • Rule 505 - Offerings of up to $5 million to accredited investors • Rule 506 - Private offerings to limited number of purchasers • Rule 147 - Purely local, intrastate

  14. Securities Exchange Act of 1934 • Regulates securities exchanges, brokers, dealers, and national securities associations • Put in place to require continual disclosure after initial issuance of stock to prevent fraud • Covers Corporations whose stock is listed on a stock exchange or who have assets in excess of $10 million and five hundred or more shareholders

  15. Securities Exchange Act of 1934 • Section 10(b) and SEC Rule 10b-5 Most importantly regulate against: • Securities Fraud • Insider Trading

  16. Securities Fraud • Rule 10b-5 makes it unlawful to do the following in connection with the purchase or sale of ANY security: • Make any untrue statement of a material fact • Omit a material fact, if such omission causes the statement to be misleading

  17. Securities Fraud • Liability potential for: • accountants who prepare fraudulent or misleading financials • attorneys who drafted them • ANYONE who participates in fraud, including • Directors • Officers • Other “responsible” parties

  18. Insider Trading • Insider Trading - Purchase or sale of securities on the basis of information that has not been made available to the investing public. • Liability extends to anyone who acquires inside information as a result of a insider’s breach of fiduciary duty to the corporation.

  19. Insider Trading • “Insiders” (Officers, Executives and Directors). • “Outsiders” • Tipper/tippee theory--insider’s fiduciary duty must be breached. • Misappropriation theory -- one wrongfully obtains inside info and trades on it. (Court may find a fiduciary relationship where one wouldn’t normally exist.)

  20. Insider Trading • Corporation may “recapture” any profits realized by an insider on any sale and purchase stock or other securities within any six-month period (Rule 16b) • Considered “short swing profits” • Inside information presumed

  21. Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 Focus on accountants and public companies • Rules for auditor independence (Registered Accounting firm cannot perform audit and non-audit services at the same time) • Increased oversight by agencies and boards (Oversight by Public Company Accounting Oversight Board-reports to the SEC)) • Whistleblower protection • Document destruction • Loans to officers and directors prohibited (See p. 63-65 & 646-648)

  22. Sarbanes Oxley Act of 2002 • Attempts to increase corporate responsibility by: • Stricter disclosure requirements. • Harsher penalties for legal violations. • Corporate officers take responsibility for financial statements and SEC reports. • CEO’s and CFO’s must personally certify reports.

  23. Financing, Investor ProtectionAnd Online Securities Offerings End of Chapter 21

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