Props for the “Reg A” Reality: A lesson in digital asset securities offerings

It pains me to say it, but Open Props’ recent announcement of the coming termination of its ongoing Regulation A (“Reg A”) digital asset securities (Props) offering and the cessation of support for its Props Loyalty Program leads me to one stark conclusion.

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#5 Did You Know: Blue Sky Preemption
SECURITIES LAW, REGULATION A Jenny Leung SECURITIES LAW, REGULATION A Jenny Leung

#5 Did You Know: Blue Sky Preemption

Like the Securities Exchange Commission (“SEC”) at the federal level, states have their own jurisdiction over securities offerings conducted within their boundaries. This can sometimes result in overlapping or additional disclosure requirements and duplicative or merit-based offering reviews by state securities regulators that can potentially add time, cost, and uncertainty to the offering process. For these reasons, in the 1990s, Congress enacted legislation that provided for the preemption (i.e., inapplicability) of state securities laws registration and qualification requirements in certain instances and delegated the SEC the authority to unilaterally do the same in limited circumstances. In 2012, Congress passed the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, which directed the SEC to promulgate new rules and added new instances of preemption to the federal securities laws.

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#4 Did You Know: Reg A Exemption has Two Tiers
REGULATION A, SECURITIES LAW Joshua Garcia REGULATION A, SECURITIES LAW Joshua Garcia

#4 Did You Know: Reg A Exemption has Two Tiers

Reg A is an exemption from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities Act”) that allows companies to publicly offer and sell securities in two similar, yet meaningfully distinct, ways:

Tier 1: for securities offerings of up to $20 million in a 12-month period; and

Tier 2: for securities offerings of up to $50 million in a 12-month period.

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#3 Did You Know: Notice of Qualification
REGULATION A, SECURITIES LAW Jenny Leung REGULATION A, SECURITIES LAW Jenny Leung

#3 Did You Know: Notice of Qualification

Regulation A (“Reg A”) is an exemption from registration under the Securities Act of 1933 (the “Securities Act”) that allows companies to publicly offer and sell up to $50 million in securities annually to retail investors. But while Reg A offerings are exempt from registration, issuers who wish to take advantage of the exemption must qualify a substantive offering document (an offering statement on a Form 1-A) with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (the “SEC”).

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#2 Did You Know: Eligible Securities

#2 Did You Know: Eligible Securities

Regulation A (“Reg A”)[1] is a great way for smaller companies to raise funds through the sale of securities — up to $50 million a year — including companies wishing to issue securities tokens. It offers a number of benefits to such companies, including the ability to (1) sell unrestricted (i.e., freely transferable) securities (2) on a continuous basis over time (3) to a variety of investors, regardless of their income or wealth (4) without having to register the securities at a state-by-state level.

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#1 Did You Know: Eligible Issuers

#1 Did You Know: Eligible Issuers

Regulation A (“Reg A”)[1] is a great way for smaller companies to raise funds through the sale of securities — up to $50 million a year — including companies wishing to issue securities tokens. It offers a number of benefits to such companies, including the ability to (1) sell unrestricted (i.e., freely transferable) securities (2) on a continuous basis over time (3) to a variety of investors, regardless of their income or wealth (4) without having to register the securities at a state-by-state level.

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The Reg A Gambit

The Reg A Gambit

The term “decentralization” can mean many things to many people. For securities lawyers, the subsets of architectural decentralization and political decentralization (distinguished in this article) carry the most weight. Essentially, is the network built so that no small group of nodes can shut it down? Is it built so that no small group of individuals has control over key governance decisions?

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