securities regulation

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©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part. SECURITIES REGULATION Chapter 18 Meiners, Ringleb & Edwards The Legal Environment of Business, 12 th Edition

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Securities Regulation. Chapter 18 Meiners, Ringleb & Edwards The Legal Environment of Business, 12 th Edition. Corporate Finance. Securities May be debt (debt securities) of certain form Note or bond that can be traded May be equity (equity financing) - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: Securities Regulation

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

SECURITIES REGULATION

Chapter 18

Meiners, Ringleb & EdwardsThe Legal Environment of Business, 12th Edition

Page 2: Securities Regulation

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

CORPORATE FINANCE Securities

May be debt (debt securities) of certain form Note or bond that can be traded

May be equity (equity financing) Most famous are common stocks traded on New

York Stock ExchangeSecurities provide capital for business operationsSecurities represented by

Pieces of paper or records in computersRepresent value in something real

Page 3: Securities Regulation

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

DEBT AND EQUITYDebt

When bonds are sold, there is often an issue of a certain amount

Bonds usually traded on securities market, so are securities

Debt financing may also occur by borrowing money from large lenders (banks, insurance companies)

Instrument usually specifies: Amount of debt Length of period Repayment method Rate of interest charged

Handled by professionals who earn commissions

Equity Equity financing is raising funds

through sale of company stock Sale of company stock to

purchasers – (shareholders) Shareholders have claim to

future profits of company Company is not obligated to

repay shareholders Can usually be traded

Page 4: Securities Regulation

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

ORIGINS OF SECURITIES REGULATION States began with blue sky laws to deter fraudulent

securities sales Most important Federal laws are:

Securities Act of 1933 Regulates initial public offerings of securities

Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Regulates trading in existing securities, disclosure

requirements, securities markets and professionals Securities and Exchange Commission

Agency responsible for enforcement and administration of federal securities laws

Page 5: Securities Regulation

©2015 Cengage Learning. All Rights Reserved. May not be scanned, copied or duplicated, or posted to a publicly accessible website, in whole or in part.

WHAT IS A SECURITY?

Merely calling something a security does not make it so

Have higher legal standards for securities Four basic elements (Howey Test):

Investment of money In a common enterpriseWith an expectation of profitsGenerated by efforts of persons other than the

investors

Page 6: Securities Regulation

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SECURITIES EXEMPT FROM REGULATION

Issued or guaranteed by government Federal, state or local

Issued by banks Issued by religious and charitable organizations Insurance policies Annuity contracts See Issue Spotter “What Are You Selling?”

Page 7: Securities Regulation

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OFFERING SECURITIES TO INVESTORS

‘33 Act requires full disclosure of all material information on security, issuers, and intended use of money before sale to public.

Material information is all relevant information an investor would want to know:BackgroundExecutivesPlan of operation

See “Securities Offering on the Web”

Page 8: Securities Regulation

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CASELATTA V. RAINEY

From 2001 - 2004, Mobile Billboards of America (MBA) sold mobile billboard “investments” in U.S. Investors given “offering circular” to comply with federal and state regulations. Billboard units were $20,000.

Leased the unit for 7 years to Outdoor Media Industries (OMI), a “shell company” owned/operated by MBA’s principals.

Investors promised average return of 13.49% per year. After 7 years, MBA would buy back the billboards & return investment. MBA claimed it had a Reserve Guaranty Trust (RGT) – $5,000 of each $20,000 would be placed in RGT.

Investors received a certificate to receive share of money earned by funds invested in RGT, plus the right to the $20,000 investment.

Latta, terminally ill, wanted a secure investment. Rainey, “Certified Senior Advisor” with MBA (of North Carolina) said Billboards was a “safe company – “absolutely no risk”.

Latta invested $100,000. (Continued)

Page 9: Securities Regulation

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Rainey received a commission of 16-20%. Lattas received “lease payments” from OMI the first year. This was classic Ponzi Scheme.

Secretary of State of North Carolina, investigated. MBA ordered to cease and desist from sales. Rainey collected Latta’s final investment.

Latta and others sued. Rainey filed for bankruptcy; Mr. Latta died. Trial Court Held: MBA billboard sales were unregistered securities –

violation of federal and state law. Also breach of fiduciary duty by Rainey to Latta, fraudulent concealment, securities fraud and conversion.

Jury awarded Mrs. Latta $95,503.40, plus $750,000 punitive damages. Court reduced punitive damages to $286,510. Rainey appealed.

HELD: Affirmed. Elements of fraud: (1) False Representation or Omission of Material

Fact, (2) Intent to Deceive, (3) Reasonable Reliance (by Lattas) All elements were present here.

CASELATTA V. RAINEY

Page 10: Securities Regulation

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THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT

Prospectus (SEC Schedule A) First version of prospectus not yet approved by SEC:

Called red herring – red ink on 1st page Provides material information about:

Issuer’s finances and business Purpose of the offering Plans for funds collected Risks involved Promoter’s managerial experience and financial compensation Financial statements certified by independent public accountants

Page 11: Securities Regulation

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Regulation S-K More detailed disclosure than in prospectus Used by investment analysts Available for public inspection

Review by SEC Doesn’t rule on merits (likelihood of success) Can require issuers to indicate high-risk factors to buyers Registration effective 20 days after filing, but SEC can issue

deficiency letter and issuer will need time to amend the filing Can issue stop order to prevent sale until examiners are happy

Costs of Registration Expensive! Need securities attorney, CPA, printer, underwriter, etc. Need to hire an underwriter (i.e. investment banker)

THE REGISTRATION STATEMENT

Page 12: Securities Regulation

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EXEMPTIONS FROM REGISTRATION

Some securities, while subject to securities laws, are exempt from registration requirements: Government Bonds Private Placements

Not offered to the public Usually placed w/institutional investors (pension plans or

insurance companies) Regulation D specifies what will qualify as a private

placement exemption • Made to accredited investors – presumed sophisticated

and wealthy – complex rules• Common Reg. D offerings are called Small Corporate

Offering Registration (SCOR) Rule 144A sale of bonds or stocks to qualified institutional

buyers (QIBs) investors w/portfolio of at least $100M

Page 13: Securities Regulation

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WKSIS Well-Known Seasoned Issuers Securities issued by WKSIs Issuers that have issued at least $1 billion in securities previously

OR

Have public-equity market capitalization of at least $700 million Includes most well-known securities firms They can file registration statements the day new offering is

announced rather than submitting for SEC staff review beforehand Can continuously update information – even on Website Securities are under shelf registration – once announced and

registered, they may be sold at any time over next 3 years.

Page 14: Securities Regulation

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REGULATION OF SECURITIES TRADING If registered under ‘33 Act, must register under ‘34 Act; If exempt under ‘33 Act, must register If traded on an exchange or over the counter (OTC) and has

>$5M assets and 500+ shareholders Publicly Held Company

Publicly traded stock Most traded OTC Must file 10-K annual report

Privately Held Company Less than 500 shareholders Not openly traded

Page 15: Securities Regulation

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PROXIES AND TENDER OFFERS Regulation FD (Fair Disclosure) in 2002 tried to create a

“level playing field,” requiring public companies to release information to the public rather than selective revealing of information

Proxies Permission by shareholders given to someone else to

vote their shares in the manner they instruct Tender Offers

When one company attempts to take over anotherTarget company’s stock owners are offered stock in the

acquiring company or cash in exchange for their stock

Page 16: Securities Regulation

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SECURITIES FRAUD Investors may have trouble proving common-law fraud Usually rely on antifraud provisions of ‘33 and ‘34 Act for statutory

fraud ‘33 Act: Misleading statements or material omissions on original

registration materials Rule 10b-5 Basis for Securities Fraud; used more than other Act sections Civil liability for misstatements Unlawful to:

Employ device, scheme to defraud Make untrue statement of material fact Engage in act or practice which operates a fraud in connection

with purchase/sale of security

Page 17: Securities Regulation

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LIABILITY FOR SECURITIES LAW VIOLATIONS

Can sue parties who prepared disclosure docs or other impt. info about securities

Can also sue: Directors of company, CEO, CFO and accounting officers,

accountants, lawyers

SEC may also act against them with civil penalties and criminal charges

Have liability for misstatements or omissions about financial status of business with publicly traded securities

Page 18: Securities Regulation

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LIABILITY FOR MISSTATEMENTS

Safe Harboro Securities Litigation Reform Act

of 1995o Allows companies to predict

profits and their likely success as long as forecasts are accompanied by “meaningful cautionary statements” that ID “important factors that could cause actual results to differ materially from those in the forward-looking statement.”

o Gives immunity from liability

Federal Exclusivityo Securities Litigation Uniform

Standards Act of 1998o Requires securities suits that

involve nationally traded securities to be brought “exclusively” in federal court under federal law.

Page 19: Securities Regulation

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CASECITY OF LIVONIA EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT

SYSTEM V. BOEING COMPANY Class action suit for all who bought Boeing stock between May 4 and June22,

2009. Key allegation: Boeing was overly optimistic about ability to get new 787 Dreamliner into service. Technical problems known after test flight; official first flight delayed. Stock fell 10% on June 23.

Suit claimed company executives made false statements about when plane would be in service and therefore committed securities fraud. District Court dismissed suit. Plaintiffs appealed.

HELD: Affirmed. Case dismissed. Private Securities Litigation Reform Act of 1995 changed securities fraud litigation. (1) Requires plaintiff complaining about “forward looking” statements (predictions or

speculations about the future) to prove “actual knowledge” of falsity on part of defendant

(2) Complaint must “state with particularity facts giving rise to a strong inference that the defendant acted with the required state of mind”• This is rather than mere inference.• “Required state of mind” is “scienter.”• Use “a reasonable person test”

(Continued)

Page 20: Securities Regulation

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There is no securities fraud by hindsight Law does not require public disclosure of mere risks of failure No predictions have a 100% probability of being correct Future is uncertain Market debut may be delayed or even abandoned Purchasers of Dreamliner protected themselves by reserving the

right to cancel their orders If top executives knew statements were false, that is one thing Here no evidence that executives made statements they knew to

be false.

CASECITY OF LIVONIA EMPLOYEES RETIREMENT

SYSTEM V. BOEING COMPANY

Page 21: Securities Regulation

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SARBANES-OXLEY ACTo CEO and CFO of companies with publicly traded stock

must personally certify that financial reports comply with SEC rules.

o Knowing misstatements have criminal fines and imprisonment.

o Protection also for corporate whistleblowers.o Established Public Company Accounting Oversight

Board to discipline CPAs for misconduct & also sets accounting standards.

o Sarbanes-Oxley has forced firms to standardize procedures and accounting.

Page 22: Securities Regulation

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INSIDER TRADING

Most controversial application of 10b-5 is prohibiting insider trading

Insiders have access to info not available to public May be liable to SEC for profits from such transactions See “London, New York and Sarbanes Oxley Act”

Page 23: Securities Regulation

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CASEU.S. SEC V. GINSBURG

Scott Ginsburg, CEO of Evergreen, owned radio stations; met with CEO of EZ Communication to discuss “strategic alternatives.” Ginsburg called his brother, Mark, and his father Jordan. Next day, Mark bought 3,800 shares of EZ stock; Jordan bought 20,000.

Day after, Evergreen and EZ began confidential merger discussions. Cell phone calls were made from Scott to Mark and Jordan. Large purchases of EZ stock followed.

EZ’s stock rose 30% -- Mark made $413,000 and Jordan made $664,000.

SEC brought civil actions against Ginsburg for securities violation – communicating material nonpublic information to brother and father.

(Continued)

Page 24: Securities Regulation

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Jury: Found he violated rule against insider trading; $1 million in penalties.

Trial court set aside verdict; said evidence insufficient that Ginsberg tipped off his brother and father; SEC appealed.

HELD: Reversed and remanded with instructions for court to reinstate $1,000,000 penalty and enjoin Ginsburg from future violation of securities laws.

SEC must prove violations by “preponderance of evidence.” May use direct or circumstantial evidence.

Telephone call/trade pattern, coupled with jury’s right to disbelieve “innocent explanations”, are enough to support the verdict.

CASEU.S. SEC V. GINSBURG

Page 25: Securities Regulation

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INSIDER TRADING ACTS

Insider Trading Sanctions Acts of 1984 Gives SEC authority to bring enforcement actions. The law was strengthened by the Insider Trading and

Securities Fraud Enforcement Act. Increased the maximum fine to persons to $1 million

per action and set maximum prison term to 10 years per violation.

Corporate fines were raised to $5 million per willful violations. Up to $25 million for non-willful violations.

See Issue Spotter “Can You Exploit the Gossip?”

Page 26: Securities Regulation

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THE INVESTMENT COMPANY ACT

Investment Companies Three types

Face-amount certificate companies – issue debt securities paying fixed rate of return

Unit investment trusts – offer fixed portfolio of securities

Management companies – most important type

Mutual Funds Open-end Company (Mutual

Fund) No specific number of shares;

expand as long as new investments

Invested in portfolio of securities

Two kinds of mutual funds: Load: Sold through securities

dealer; have commissions (load) of some % of price

No-Load: Sold directly to public through mail or Internet; no sales commissions

Page 27: Securities Regulation

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REGULATION OF INVESTMENT COMPANIES

Register with SEC State Policy and provide financial information Annual reports Capital requirements Payment of dividends Registration and Disclosure

Securities registered Disclosure requirement of the SEC for publicly-traded securities

Limiting Conflicts of Interest Restrictions on who may be on Board of Directors At least 74% must be outsiders Invested funds can’t be used for deals with persons affiliated with

company’ All deals “arm’s length”

Page 28: Securities Regulation

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THE INVESTMENT ADVISERS ACT

Investment Adviser is a “person who, for compensation, engages in the business of advising others . . . as to the advisability of investing in, purchasing or selling securities”

Hired by investment companies Registered with SEC Manage operations “Deemed to have a fiduciary duty with respect to receipt

of compensation for services” rendered to company. See “European Approaches to Insider Trading”

Page 29: Securities Regulation

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PROFESSIONAL RESPONSIBILITY TO CLIENTS

Brokers Effecting transactions for

the account of others Dealers

Buying and selling securities for own account

Advisers Charging fees for

investment advice

Must be registered with SEC

Can’t churn Excessive buying and

selling of client’s account to get commissions

Can’t scalp Buy stocks for personal

benefit then urge clients to buy so price goes up

Page 30: Securities Regulation

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STOCK MARKET REGULATION New York Stock Exchange and other exchanges governed by the

Financial Industry Regulatory Authority (FINRA) An independent regulatory authority that sets rules of behavior

for its traders and handles most disputes by arbitration; also oversees brokerage firms and employees

Self-Regulation of Securities Markets SEC has power to monitor stock markets

Regulation of Securities Transactions Regulates actions of securities Professionals who do actual trading Professionals can’t trade for their own benefit ahead of

customers Penalties: Include suspension or expulsion

Page 31: Securities Regulation

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ARBITRATION OF DISPUTES

Usually investors with investment firms sign a standard form indicating disputes must be arbitrated, not litigated.

SEC rules govern the arbitration process. The Supreme Court upholds the binding nature of

arbitration agreements.

Page 32: Securities Regulation

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DODD-FRANK WALL STREET REFORM AND CONSUMER PROTECTION ACT

Dodd-Frank Wall Street Reform Act (2010) Established new regulatory authority in consumer credit area Regulators oversee general market conditions – prepared to act

in case of crisis Oversight of “systemic risk” – market-wide problem Example: Financial meltdown in 2007-08 by the Financial

Stability Oversight Council Regulators can intervene in financial institution in case of trouble Trading of derivatives also open to greater regulatory oversight Greater desire for transparency