FINRA and the SEC Move One Step Closer to JOBS Act Implementation
Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) January 31, 2013
FINRA’s information request brings optimism to the crowdfunding industry’s leading trade organizations CFIRA and CfPA.
Washington, D.C. (PRWEB) January 31, 2013
FINRA’s information request brings optimism to the crowdfunding industry’s leading trade organizations CFIRA and CfPA.
At the World Economic Forum 2013 in Davos, Switzerland, Rep. Patrick McHenry (R., N.C.) talks with Neil Lipschultz at Davos about “Crowdfunding” and the future of the JOBS Act, aimed to help small and emerging businesses attract financing.
Rep. Patrick McHenry on Crowdfunding and the JOBS Act in WEF Davos, Switzerland
By ROBB MANDELBAUM
When the Jobs Act became law in April, supporters proclaimed a new era for small businesses seeking to raise money.
The “game changer,” as President Obama put it in the Rose Garden as he signed the bill, was a provision to let small companies “crowdfund” — that is, sell stock and other securities over the Internet directly to the public. “For the first time,” the president said, “ordinary Americans will be able to go online and invest in entrepreneurs that they believe in.”
But it now seems that dawn will break late on this new age of democratic investing. The Securities and Exchange Commission appears certain to miss its end-of-year deadline for issuing regulations to put the provision into effect. And with the departure of the S.E.C. chairwoman, Mary L. Schapiro, and three of her top deputies — including two who manage the offices writing the regulations — some in the nascent equity crowdfunding industry worry that it could be 2014 before their line of business becomes legal.
The delay has frustrated many crowdfunding backers. The 270 days that Congress gave the S.E.C. to write the rules “is not a suggested timeline; it is a Congressional mandate,” said Kim Wales, an organizer at Crowdfund Intermediary Regulatory Advocates, a lobbying group formed in April to represent the new industry, in an e-mailed statement. “The S.E.C. answers to Congress, not the other way around.”
Read more…
Originally published in the New York Times on December 27, 2012
http://www.nytimes.com/2012/12/27/business/smallbusiness/why-the-sec-is-likely-to-miss-its-deadline-to-write-crowdfunding-rules.html
By AnnMarie McIlwain, Founder and CEO, www.careerfuel.net
According to the U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, 4.6 million jobs were created in 2000 by establishments less than 1 year old. In 2011, this number declined to 2.5 million—a loss of 2.1 million jobs.
The infographic below shows how crowdfunding-for-equity, a new fundraising tool created by the JOBS Act of April, 2012, has the potential to fill that shortfall in job creation. However, crowdfunding-for-equity can’t happen until the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) writes the regulations. The SEC missed their first deadline in meeting this enormous challenge in July.
Please join us in telling the SEC how important it is to meet the end-of-year deadline for this new set of regulatory laws. Click here and sign the petition.