General Rules and Regulations
promulgated
under the
Securities Act of 1933
Rule 155 -- Integration of Abandoned Offerings
Preliminary Note:
Compliance with paragraph (b) or (c) of this section provides
a non-exclusive safe harbor from integration of private and registered offerings.
Because of the objectives of Rule 155 and the policies underlying the Act, Rule
155 is not available to any issuer for any transaction or series of transactions
that, although in technical compliance with the rule, is part of a plan or scheme
to evade the registration requirements of the Act.
Definition of terms. For the purposes of
this section only, a private offering means an unregistered offering of securities
that is exempt from registration under Section 4(2)
or 4(6) of the Act or Rule
506 of Regulation D.
Abandoned private offering followed by a registered
offering. A private offering of securities will not be considered part
of an offering for which the issuer later files a registration statement if:
No securities were sold in the private offering;
The issuer and any person(s) acting on its
behalf terminate all offering activity in the private offering before
the issuer files the registration statement;
The Section
10(a) final prospectus and any Section 10 preliminary prospectus used
in the registered offering disclose information about the abandoned private
offering, including:
The size and nature of the private
offering;
The date on which the issuer abandoned
the private offering;
That any offers to buy or indications
of interest given in the private offering were rejected or otherwise
not accepted; and
That the prospectus delivered in the
registered offering supersedes any offering materials used in the
private offering; and
The issuer does not file the registration
statement until at least 30 calendar days after termination of all offering
activity in the private offering, unless the issuer and any person acting
on its behalf offered securities in the private offering only to persons
who were (or who the issuer reasonably believes were):
Accredited investors (as that term
is defined in Rule 501(a));
or
Persons who satisfy the knowledge
and experience standard of Rule
506(b)(2)(ii).
Abandoned registered offering followed by a
private offering. An offering for which the issuer filed a registration
statement will not be considered part of a later commenced private offering
if:
No securities were sold in the registered
offering;
The issuer withdraws the registration statement
under Rule 477;
Neither the issuer nor any person acting
on the issuer's behalf commences the private offering earlier than 30
calendar days after the effective date of withdrawal of the registration
statement under Rule 477;
The issuer notifies each offeree in the private
offering that:
The offering is not registered under
the Act;
The securities will be "restricted
securities" (as that term is defined in Rule
144(a)(3)) and may not be resold unless they are registered under
the Act or an exemption from registration is available;
Purchasers in the private offering
do not have the protection of Section
11 of the Act; and
A registration statement for the abandoned
offering was filed and withdrawn, specifying the effective date of
the withdrawal; and
Any disclosure document used in the private
offering discloses any changes in the issuer's business or financial condition
that occurred after the issuer filed the registration statement that are
material to the investment decision in the private offering.
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