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Rule 506 of Regulation D is
considered a "safe harbor" for the private
offering exemption of Section 4(2) of the
Securities Act. Companies using the Rule 506
exemption can raise an unlimited amount of
money.
A company can be assured it
is within the Section 4(2) exemption by
satisfying the following standards:
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The
company may sell its securities to
an unlimited number of "accredited
investors" and up to 35 other
purchases. Unlike Rule 505, all
non-accredited investors, either
alone or with a purchaser
representative, must be
sophisticated—that is, they must
have sufficient knowledge and
experience in financial and
business matters to make them
capable of evaluating the merits
and risks of the prospective
investment;
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Companies must
decide what information to give to
accredited investors, so long as it
does not violate the antifraud
prohibitions of the federal
securities laws. But companies must
give non-accredited investors
disclosure documents that are
generally the same as those used in
registered offerings. If a company
provides information to accredited
investors, it must make this
information available to
non-accredited investors as
well;
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Financial
statement requirements are the same
as for Rule
505; and
While companies using the
Rule 506 exemption do not have to register
their securities and usually do not have to
file reports with the SEC, they must file what
is known as a "Form D" after they first sell
their securities. Form D is a brief notice that
includes the names and addresses of the
company’s owners and stock promoters, but
contains little other information about the
company.
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