Law Chapter 18: Securities Regulations
private company
A company that has fewer than 500 shareholders and does not allow its securities to be openly traded
tender offer
A public offer to buy a block of stock directly from shareholders
exemption from registration
Advisers who have no place of business in the state, but are registered in another state, and whose only clients in the state are: 1) Registered B/Ds, 2) Investment advisers, 3) Institutional investors, 4) Existing clients temporarily in the state, 5) Five or less clients resident in the state during the previous 12 months, 6) Anyone else the Admin exempts by rule or order
material information
All relevant information that an investor would want to know about a company, its background, its executives, and its plan of operation
mutual fund
An institution that sells shares to the public and uses the proceeds to buy a portfolio of stocks and bonds
equity
Common stocks traded on stock exchanges
disclosure requirements
Filing a registration statement with the SEC
investment company
Invests and trades in securities
shelf registration
Securities that may be sold at any time over the next tree years
over the counter
Securities traded illegally
publicly-held company
Any company that issued traded securities
insider trading
The buying or selling of stock by persons who have access to information affecting the value of the stock that has not yet been revealed to the public
red herring
The first version of the prospectus not yet approved by the SEC
scalping
When a professional buys stock for personal benefit, then urges investors to buy the stock so that the price rises to the benefit of the professional
prospectus
A document providing the legal offering of the sale of the security
security
A financial asset—such as a stock or a bond—that can be bought and sold in a financial market
private placement
A primary market issue that is negotiated between the issuing corporation and a small group of accredited investors
underwriter
An investment banker to market the securities
Howey test
An investment is classified as a security for the purpose of federal regulation if it contains four basic elements: investment of money, common enterprise, expectation of profits, generated by the efforts of persons other than the investors
debt securities
Bonds that are usually traded on the securities market
securities fraud
Failure to follow the disclosure requirements
accredited investor
Investors that are presumed to be sophisticated and wealthy enough to evaluate investment opportunities without an SEC-approved prospectus
well-known seasoned issuers
Issuers that have offered at least $1 billion in debt securities previously or have a public-equity market capitalization of at least $700 million
misstatements
Misleading statements and material omissions in securities registration material
debt
Money borrowed by a corporation usually as note or bond that can be traded
registration statement
New security offering that has a prospectus and detailed information required by the SEC
conflicts of interest
Occur when an individual's self interest conflicts with acting in the best interest of another, when the individual has an obligation to do so
qualified institutional buyers
One that owns and invests at least $100 million in securities and is allowed by the SEC to trade in unregistered securities. They may buy life insurance policies in these transactions
proxy
Permission given by a shareholder to another party to vote his shares in the manner he instructs
investment adviser
Person who, for compensation, engages in the business of advising others
safe harbor
Provision in a law or regulation that provides some measure of protection from liablity if certain conditions are met
equity financing
Raising funds through the sale of company stock where a shareholder gains an equitable interest
blue sky laws
State laws that regulate the offering and sale of securities for the protection of the public
churning
When a broker who has control of a client's account buys and sells an excessive amount of stock to make money from the commissions earned on transactions
securities exchange
an agency created in 1934 that monitors the stock market and enforces laws regulating the sale of stocks and bonds