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Alon Y. Kapen is a corporate transactional lawyer representing entrepreneurs, emerging growth companies, and early-stage investors. He is also a trusted advisor to mature companies in connection with sophisticated business transactions.

 

The Securities and Exchange Commission released helpful guidance on some of the practical aspects of the new Rule 506(c) exemption for private offerings using general solicitation and advertising.  The guidance comes in the form of Questions 260.05 – 260.13 in its Questions and Answers of General Applicability and include the following:

  • Exemption is available to

In a massive 585 page release, the Securities Exchange Commission on October 23 issued its long overdue proposed rules on equity crowdfunding to implement the statutory equity crowdfunding exemption set forth in Title III of the JOBS Act.  As proposed, Regulation Crowdfunding implements and further clarifies the statutory requirements for equity crowdfunding, and in

The second annual Cornell Entrepreneurship Summit was held on October 11 in New York City and I was thrilled to attend.  This year, the Summit was sub-captioned “The Beginning:  From Nothing to Something”, and featured presentations from mostly Cornell entrepreneur-alums, one VC-alum and a few reps from entrepreneurship@cornell, the campus-wide program that promotes

The new SEC rules lifting the ban on general solicitation and general advertising in certain private offerings go into effect today, September 23, 2013.  Beginning today, issuers in Rule 506 offerings may generally solicit investors and advertise their offerings provided they take reasonable measures to ensure that each purchaser is an accredited investor.  The new

Last month, the SEC released its Final Report on the 2012 SEC Government-Business Forum on Small Business Capital Formation, the SEC’s annual forum to address perceived unnecessary impediments to small business capital formation. Participants typically include small business executives, VCs, government officials, trade association representatives, lawyers, accountants, academics and small business advocates.  The Report contains

Farrell Fritz and our Emerging Companies and Venture Capital Practice Group are proud to launch the New York Venture Hub blog, a resource for entrepreneurs, emerging companies, the investors who invest in them and the professionals who serve them. This is an exciting time for the innovation ecosystem, with renewed legislative and regulatory efforts to reform capital markets to make it easier for private companies to raise capital and for small companies to go public. There has also been a proliferation of regional efforts to accelerate the commercialization of home-grown technologies through university spinouts and other technology transfer arrangements with local job creating companies. Accelerate Long Island is one such initiative, created to promote the local commercialization of inventions produced at Long Island’s world-renowned research institutions. Farrell Fritz has been playing, and will continue to play, a key role in this effort. Just across the East River (or literally, on it), Cornell University and Technion are building a world-class applied engineering campus on Roosevelt Island that is predicted to result in the creation of 600 spinouts over the next three decades. Farrell Fritz believes that technology innovation will transform our economy nationally and regionally, and we hope the New York Venture Hub blog will prove to be a useful resource to the developing innovation ecosystem. We invite you to link to our blog.

New York Emerges as Tech Powerhouse
Continue Reading New York Emerges as Tech Powerhouse

In perhaps the only successful bipartisanship effort in 2012 to remove barriers to economic growth, Congress passed and the President signed on April 5, 2012 the most comprehensive set of laws to facilitate small company capital raising since the Federal securities laws were first enacted in the 1930s. In a nutshell, the JOBS Act (acronym for the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act) creates an on-ramp for small company IPOs, removes the prohibition on general solicitation and advertising from the most commonly used private offering, creates a new equity crowdfunding exemption, sharply raises the cap for the small company offering exemption under Regulation A from $5 million to $50 million in any 12-month period and significantly raises the shareholder number trigger for Exchange Act registration. Some provisions are immediately effective, but others require SEC rulemaking.
Continue Reading Startups’ Guide to JOBS Act