Lynn Johannson, Advisor, Sustainability and ESG
January 4th, 2024
AUM Law | Paul Hayward | February 2015
Over the last three years, securities regulators in the United States and Canada have proposed major reforms to securities law requirements to facilitate “equity crowdfunding”, or the sale of securities by issuers to large numbers of investors through online portal intermediaries.
With final rules for equity crowdfunding expected to be in place in 2015, widespread equity crowdfunding may soon become a reality in the United States and Canada. However, even in the absence of these rules, more limited forms of equity crowdfunding are already occurring here and in the United States.
In Canada, as explained below, a number of registered dealers already operate or have announced plans to establish online portals to facilitate the sale of securities through the Internet (both primary issuances and secondary trading) in reliance on existing prospectus exemptions, including the “accredited investor” exemption1 and (in the jurisdictions where available) the “offering memorandum” exemption (the OM exemption). (2)
The United States kick-started recent reform efforts relating to equity crowdfunding with the signing into law of the Jumpstart Our Business Startups (JOBS) Act (3) in April 2012. Together with a number of other important amendments to the federal securities laws, Title III to the JOBS Act, called the CROWDFUND Act [or the Capital Raising Online While Deterring Fraud and Unethical Non-Disclosure Act], raised the prospect that U.S. businesses could for the first time raise capital through widespread “equity crowdfunding”.
Crowdfunding has become common in a non-securities context through sites such as Kickstarter or Indiegogo. However, equity crowdfunding has been relatively slow to take off in North America due to the difficulty of complying with various regulatory requirements applicable to issuers and intermediaries when selling securities through the Internet. (4)
The JOBS Act Crowdfunding amendments were intended to address these regulatory difficulties by creating a streamlined regulatory framework that would, subject to appropriate rule-making by the Securities and Exchange Commission (the SEC), facilitate capital raising and reduce the regulatory burden on small and emerging businesses while retaining certain important investor protections.
The principal investor protection measures contemplated by the JOBS Act Crowdfunding amendments are the proposed investor limits (see table below), which are intended to reduce the risk of loss to investors, and the requirement that offerings be made through a registered intermediary, either a conventional broker - dealer or a new type of registered firm, a “funding portal”.
In October 2013, the SEC published for comment new Regulation Crowdfunding under the Securities Act of 1933 and the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 to implement the requirements of Title III of the JOBS Act. Regulation Crowdfunding proposed rules governing the offer and sale of securities under new Section 4(6) of the Securities Act of 1933. The proposal also set out a framework for the regulation of registered funding portals and brokers that issuers are required to use as intermediaries when using the new crowdfunding exemption.
While the SEC has yet to finalize its crowdfunding rules, a number of state regulators have moved forward with final rules to facilitate equity crowdfunding within their states. For more information about recent developments with equity crowdfunding in the United States, see the SEC JOBS Act webpage.(5)
In Canada, the Ontario Securities Commission (OSC) announced its own wide-ranging review of the exempt market in June 2012,(6) and subsequently published a comprehensive Consultation Paper in December 2012 (7) and a Progress Report in August 2013,(8) both of which contained proposals for a crowdfunding prospectus exemption and a new type of registered intermediary, the registered funding portal. The Progress Report also indicated that the OSC was considering adopting a version of the OM exemption based on the Alberta version of the OM exemption in section 2.9 of NI 45-106.
During this period, a number of other Canadian jurisdictions, including Quebec, Saskatchewan and New Brunswick, held panel discussions and public consultations in relation to equity crowdfunding. (9)
In March 2014, the members of the Canadian Securities Administrators (the CSA) published for comment two sets of proposals relating to the selling of securities through the Internet:
Proposed MI 45-108 sets out a proposed prospectus exemption to facilitate capital raising by reporting and non-reporting issuers, other than investment funds, through online portals and a proposed regulatory framework for a new type of registrant, the "registered funding portal" (a 45-108 portal).
Investment Limits at a Glance | ||
JOBS Act Crowdfunding(US$) | Proposed MI 45-108Crowdfunding | Proposed Start-UpExemption Crowdfunding |
Ontario | Quebec | SaskatchewanManitoba | New Brunswick | Nova Scotia | Quebec | SaskatchewanManitoba | New Brunswick | Nova Scotia | |
Non-public issuers are able to raise up to $1 million in reliance on the exemption within any 12-month period. | Public and non-public issuers (other than investment funds) are able to raise up to $1.5 million under the offering in a 12-month period. | Non-public issuers (other than investment funds) would be able to raise $150,000 per offering (with a limit of two offerings per calendar year). |
Investors would be limited to investing:12· $2,000 or 5 percent of their annual income or net worth, whichever is greater, if both their annual income and net worth are less than $100,000; or· 10 percent of their annual income or net worth, whichever is greater, if either their annual income or net worth is equal to or more than $100,000. During the 12-month period, these investors would not be able to purchase more than $100,000 of securities through crowdfunding. | Investors would be limited to investing $2,500 per investment and $10,000 per calendar year under this exemption; investors may invest larger amounts in reliance on other prospectus exemptions (e.g., the accredited investor exemption) outside the portal. | Investors would be limited to investing $1,500 per investment (but with no limit on the number of investments they may invest in). |
The transaction must be conducted through a registered intermediary – either a broker- dealer or a new type of registered intermediary, a “funding portal”. | The transaction must be conducted through a funding portal registered in the restricted dealer category (a 45-108 portal) that would be subject to similar requirements to Exempt Market Dealers (EMDs), but with some important exceptions, including "client-specific" know-your-client (KYC) and suitability requirements. | Start-Up Exemption portals would be exempt from registration, but would be subject to background checks and certain ongoing requirements, including requirements relating to ensuring only eligible issuers and investors participate in the offering, and ensuring that investor funds are held in trust. |
Although the proposed crowdfunding regimes contemplated by proposed MI 45-108 and the Start-Up Exemption appear to represent alternative approaches to the regulation of crowdfunding offerings, the Multilateral CSA Notice indicates that the participating jurisdictions intend for both exemptions to coexist “as they target issuers at different stages of development”.
This concept of a hierarchy (or “ecosystem”) of crowdfunding regulation regimes – with smaller offerings more lightly regulated than larger offerings – is also consistent with the view that crowdfunding offerings at levels higher than permitted under the Start-Up Exemption or the 45-108 regime can and should be achieved through existing prospectus exemptions, such as the OM exemption, and through existing dealer categories. As discussed below, this is already occurring in Canada.
As of the date of this nutshell, the members of the CSA have not yet published a substantive update on these proposals relating to the Start-Up exemption or the MI 45-108 proposals.
In part, this appears to be due to the fact that, in Ontario at least, the crowdfunding proposals were published as part of a broader package of capital raising proposals, including proposals to introduce a version of the OM exemption to Ontario, as well new exemptions based on the “friends, family and business associates” exemption in section 2.5 of NI 45-106 and an “existing securityholder exemption”. (13)
On February 5, 2015, the OSC announced that it was proceeding with amendments to OSC Rule 45 -501 that give effect to the proposals for an “existing securityholder” exemption. These amendments came into force on February 11, 2015. (14)
On February 19, 2015, the OSC announced that it was proceeding with amendments to NI 45 -106 to introduce a “friends, family and business associates” exemption to Ontario and to eliminate the carve -out in Ontario for investment funds in the managed account category of the accredited investor exemption definition in s. 1.1 of NI 45-106.
The proposal to introduce to Ontario a version of the OM exemption – albeit a version of the OM exemption subject to investment limits for individual investors who do not qualify as accredited investors ($10,000 or $30,000 under the exemption in a calendar year depending on the circumstances of the investor) – together with the coordinated proposals by the securities regulators in Alberta, Quebec and Saskatchewan15 to introduce similar investment limits to their existing versions of the OM exemption, have triggered strong industry opposition particularly in jurisdictions that already have this exemption.
In a related “Backgrounder” notice,(16) the OSC stated that “the participating CSA jurisdictions collectively received approximately 916 comment letters (17) regarding the OM exemption and approximately 45 comment letters regarding the crowdfunding regime. [CSA staff] are reviewing the comments and our goal is to publish the OM exemption and the crowdfunding regime either in final form or, if warranted, for a second comment period, in summer 2015.”
As noted above, a number of registered dealers, including exempt market dealers (EMDs) and restricted dealers, already operate or have announced plans to establish online portals to facilitate distributions and other trades of securities through the Internet (both primary and secondary trading) in reliance on exemptions other than the prospectus exemption in proposed MI 45-108 Crowdfunding or the Start-Up Exemption.
These portals generally facilitate private placements in reliance on one or more existing pr ospectus exemptions:
In theory, these portals could also facilitate distributions made in reliance on other prospectus exemptions, including the following:
The following are examples of dealers that have established or announced plans to establish online portals:
> CommunityLend Inc. (former PM and EMD)
> Crowdmatrix Inc. (application for registration as an EMD pending)
> The Funding Portal Inc. (EMD)
> InvestX Capital Ltd. proposed portal to be operated by Waverley Corporate Financial Services Ltd (EMD)
> Klondike Strike Inc. (application for registration as an EMD pending)
> Liquidity Source Inc. (former EMD)
> MaRS VX (aka SVX) (restricted dealer) (19)
> Open Avenue Inc. (EMD)
> P2P Financial Inc. c/o/b as Optimize Capital Markets (EMD)
> TSX Private Markets operated by Shorcan Brokers Limited (EMD)
> SeedUps Canada / Exempt Capital Network portals operated by Waverley Corporate Financial Services Ltd (EMD)
> Silver Maple Ventures Inc. (EMD)
While the expected introduction of new equity crowdfunding rules in 2015 will be welcomed by many Canadian market participants, in view of the investment limits and other conditions that were included in the equity crowdfunding proposals that were published for comment in March 2014, the proposed introduction of the OM exemption to Ontario in 2015 may well prove to be more significant from an equity crowdfunding perspective.
On the other hand, the crowdfunding proposals that were published for comment in March 2014 generally contemplate a “lighter regulatory touch” than is the case with existing prospectus exemption and dealer registration categories. Accordingly, in keeping with the concept of a hierarchy of regulatory regimes crowdfunding regulation regimes – with smaller offerings more lightly regulated than larger offerings – Canadians may soon have a variety of equity crowdfunding options from which to choose.
Please contact a member of our Regulatory Compliance Group for guidance on any of the topics in this nutshell. This nutshell is an overview only and it does not constitute legal advice. It is not intended to be a complete statement of the law or an opinion on any matter. No one should act upon the information in this nutshell without a thorough examination of the law as applied to the facts of a specific situation.
1 See section 2.3 of National Instrument 45-106 Prospectus and Registration Exemptions (NI 45-106).
2 See section 2.9 of NI 45-106.
3 Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, Pub. L. 112-106, 126 Stat. 306 (2012) [the JOBS Act].
4 For a discussion of the U.S. regulatory issues with crowdfunding, see Bradford, Crowdfunding and the Federal Securities
Laws, Columbia Business Law Review, Vol. 2012, No. 1; and Bradford, The New Federal Crowdfunding Exemption: Promise Unfulfilled, Securities Regulation Law Journal, Vol. 40, No. 3, Fall 2012.
5 http://www.sec.gov/spotlight/jobs-act.shtml
6 OSC Staff Notice 45-707 OSC Broadening Scope of Review of Prospectus Exemptions (June 2012).
7 OSC Staff Consultation Paper 45-710 Considerations for New Capital Raising Prospectus Exemptions (the Consultation
Paper) (December 2012).
8 OSC Notice 45-712 Progress Report on Review of Prospectus Exemptions to Facilitate Capital Raising (the Progress
Report) (August 2013).
9 The New Brunswick Securities Commission held panel discussions on crowdfunding on November 27, 2012. The Autorité des marchés financiers (the AMF) published a Notice of Public Consultation dated February 25, 2013. In July 2013, the
Saskatchewan Financial and Consumer Affairs Authority (the FCAA) published a concept proposal for equity
crowdfunding and then, in October 2013, published for comment a framework for a proposed Saskatchewan-only equity Crowdfunding exemption. On Dec. 6, 2013 the FCAA adopted a blanket order implementing this framework. See the FCAA equity crowdfunding page at http://www.fcaa.gov.sk.ca/skec.
10 In Ontario, see the OSC Notice and Request for Comment relating to Proposed Amendments to NI 45-106 Prospects and
Registration Exemptions and related instruments (including Proposed Multilateral Instrument 45-108 Crowdfunding and proposed Multilateral Policy 45-108CP Crowdfunding) dated March 20, 2014 (the March 2014 OSC Proposals). In the other CSA jurisdictions that published proposed MI 45-108 for comment, see the Multilateral CSA Notice of Publication and Request for Comment re Draft Regulation 45-108 respecting Crowdfunding (the March 2014 Multilateral CSA Crowdfunding Notice).
11 See, e.g., the British Columbia Securities Commission commentary on “crowdfunding” at p. 8 of the Guide to Capital
Raising for Small Business, available at http://www.bcsc.bc.ca/.
12 The investment limits for investors are set out in subsection 4(6) of the Securities Act of 1933 (as introduced by section
302 of Title III of the JOBS Act).
13 See the March 2014 OSC Proposals, supra. For a high-level overview of the four new capital raising exemptions proposed for Ontario, see the OSC Backgrounder dated March 20, 2014, available at http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/News/nr_20140320_osc-proposes-four-capital-raising-backgrounder.pdf.
14 See the Notice of Ministerial Approval of Amendments to OSC Rule 45-501 Ontario Prospectus and Registration
Exemptions dated February 5, 2015.
15 Multilateral CSA Notice of Publication and Request for Comment re Proposed Amendments to National Instrument 45-
106 Prospectus and Registration Exemptions Relating to the Offering Memorandum Exemption and in Alberta, New Brunswick and Saskatchewan, Reports of Exempt Distribution dated March 20, 2014 (the March 2014 Multilateral CSA OM Proposals), available at
http://www.albertasecurities.com/Regulatory%20Instruments/4780093-v1-
CSA_Notice_re%20proposed_amendments_to_OM.pdf.
16 http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/News/nr_20150219_family-friends-business-backgrounder.pdf
17 http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/en/23986.htm The AUM Law comment letter can be found at http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/documents/en/Securities-Category4-Comments/com_20140618_45-106_blumbergere.pdf.
18 See Multilateral CSA Notice 45-313 Prospectus Exemptions for Distributions to Existing Security Holders.
19 The MaRS VX portal is unique in that it is so far the only online portal to be granted exemptive relief from certain “client-
specific” KYC and suitability requirements. See the summary of this relief in the Progress Report and OSC Staff Notice
33-742 2013 OSC Annual Summary Report for Dealers, Advisers and Investment Fund Managers. The OSC has indicated that this relief should not necessarily be considered a precedent for other types of portals, such as EMD portals that facilitate offerings in reliance on existing prospectus exemptions. However, this relief is also contemplated for the funding portals described in proposed MI 45-108. This relief and the MaRS VX model generally is described in the following two orders:
http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/en/SecuritiesLaw_ord_20140313_214_marsx-vx.htm http://www.osc.gov.on.ca/en/SecuritiesLaw_ord_20130620_215_mars-vx.htm
The National Crowdfunding Association of Canada (NCFA Canada) is a cross-Canada non-profit actively engaged with both social and investment crowdfunding stakeholders across the country. NCFA Canada provides education, research, leadership, support and networking opportunities to over 950+ members and works closely with industry, government, academia, community and eco-system partners and affiliates to create a strong and vibrant crowdfunding industry in Canada. Learn more About Us or visit ncfacanada.org.
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