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Title III of the JOBS Act vote is scheduled

October 28, 2015, posted by Kim Wales

Three years after the Securities and Exchange Commission released proposed rules for Title III, Regulation Crowdfunding, news was released yesterday that the Commission will take a vote on whether or not to release the final rules for Title III on Friday, October 30, 2015.

Given the challenges with the 653 pages of proposed final rules, I am hopeful that commission took into account the 300+ recommendation letters, numerous meetings and sideline protest that would amend the final rules into a usable form.

There were many changes requested but the top 3 included:

  1. Increasing the maximum raise from $1 million to $5 million during a 12 month period.
  2. Raise the cap from $500k to $750k before requiring the issuer to provide audited financial statements and to remove the yearly mandate.
  3. Remove the Liability on funding platforms, see page 280.

The meeting at the SEC is open to the public. It is scheduled to take pace at 10:00 AM in the Auditorium Room (L-002). The proceedings are expected to be live-streamed on the SEC web site.

The SEC outlined the meeting:

  1. The Commission will consider whether to adopt rules and forms related to the offer and sale of securities through crowdfunding under Section 4(a)(6) of the Securities Act of 1933, as mandated by Title III of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act.
  2. The Commission will consider whether to propose amendments to Securities Act Rule 147 and Rule 504.

 

New peer-to-peer operating principles for P2P Financial Association Members

October 28, 2015, posted by Kim Wales

Christine Farnish, Chair of the Peer-to-Peer Finance Association (P2PFA) announced new operating principles that will enhance risk management and promote transparency for the sector.

Over the last 12 months, data collected by P2P FA showed that almost £2bn worth of new lending in the EU P2P industry  from consumers, small businesses and property lending almost doubling.

The new guidelines require P2P association members to publish debt data to a common standard, make their loan books transparent and ensure that retail investors are competing on the same level playing field as institutional investors.

“Our new operating principles set a benchmark of fair dealing and transparency,” said Christine Farnish, Chair of the P2PFA.  “By the New Year, all our members will publish their full loan books, show bad debt losses in a comparable way, and commit to ensuring that retail investors get a fair deal compared with institutions.

“These new measures will help build further consumer confidence, demonstrate our commitment to ethical practice and set a beacon of good practice across the market.”

You can see a copy of the new guidelines here:

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