Effect of Technology on Regulation of Capital Markets
-- By
AlexeySokolin - 27 Nov 2011
Online tools challenge financial regulation of private offerings and capital markets. Surprisingly, securities regulation is bending to technology and accepting the new paradigm.
Traditional Regulation Framework
Companies raise money for many reasons: to finance operations, build products, or experiment with business models. Raising money implies that someone is investing in the company, whether in the form of debt or equity, and corresponds to a certain level of risk. To appropriately communicate that risk to investors, firms are regulated under the
Securities Act of 1933 and must disclose relevant information in offering documents. For billion dollar market capitalization companies, the cost of compliance is onerous but manageable. Younger, smaller companies can be dissuaded from public capital raising altogether by the associated costs.
Regulation D provides an exemption that allows capital to be raised privately when certain threshold are met. For example, the number of offerees and purchasers is limited, general promotion is prohibited, the purchase is made without a view to resale, and investors contract directly with the issuer. The investors must be
accredited, with an income greater than $200,000 or over $1 million in investable assets. In principle, the rule strips regulatory protection from people that can protect themselves, with wealth being a proxy for ability to understand risk.
Private Securities and Technology Innovation
In the age of
Facebook, everyone is an entrepreneur. The web has enabled explosive growth in
technology start-ups and their funding. It is also easier than ever to find a company in which to invest. Thus the corollary: in the age of
AngelList, everyone is an investor. Several companies have emerged to facilitate next-generation financing, and challenge how private placements have been done in the past.
Kickstarter is one of the most successful crowd-funding websites. It allows regular, unsophisticated, unaccredited people to contribute capital for projects. The transaction is structured as follows: a project owner sets some minimum amount that they are raising, and then associates certain contribution levels with certain rewards. For example, a $25 contribution may be a pre-order of the product when it is made; a $500 contribution may be an autographed copy of the product, along with special commentary and extra personalized goods. If the minimum tipping point is reached, the project is funded and the author commits to carrying it out. Most projects are creative, in
music and visual arts, and
cost below $1,000, but some are as large as
$200,000 and have more than 6,000 backers. The contributions are unlike equity or fixed income investments since contributors have no claim on the company, other than the products. This cooperative form of finance allows customer demand to support projects they care about before a product is finished.
AngelList is a social network for angels--individuals that are likely accredited investors, and qualify for the Regulation D exemption. Driven primarily by reputation and references, this network quickly accelerates traditional fundraising timelines. Instead of going door-to-door with a presentation, entrepreneurs can take advantage of network effects and access a large number of people simultaneously. This is convenient. As an entrepreneur, you want to put your materials in front of every single person that could potentially invest, which would run afoul of the rule against promotion of securities.
AngelList? deals with this by facilitating personal introductions and warning against solicitation. Warned or not, the entrepreneur is one click away from tweeting an investment update to thousands of strangers. A competitor site,
Gust, serves a similar function for investor networks. Stronger restrictions on mass communication make it less convenient to spam your investment materials to venture firms, but not less feasible.
Another innovation in marketing private equity is represented by secondary market exchanges. After an initial public offering, public stock is traded on secondary markets like NYSE and NASDAQ. As stressed before, financial regulation mandates compliance using
accounting and disclosure standards so that risks about the security are known. When those securities are private, compliance is far less rigorous; the stock must not be widely traded and is restricted to institutional and accredited investors. However, recent years have seen low IPO activity and high demand for private company stock (e.g., Facebook). Companies like
Second Market and
Share Post built online exchanges for restricted share, creating prices and convenient trading platforms. Although members are limited to legally appropriate categories, the line is being blurred and the
SEC had launched investigations into trading members.
Emerging Legal Foundation
It is no surprise then that these companies consider existing regulation outdated and are
lobbying to change the rules. Combined with the pressure of a stagnant economy, tight lending, and politically appealing “small business” demographic,
it may be working. The House passed several bills to make private investment easier: increasing the number of maximum shareholders for closely held banks by 1,500 and growing the exemption from SEC registration from $5 million to $50 million.
Other proposals on the table would allow broad soliciting and advertising, replace the accredited investor rule with a 10% of income rule, and empower online services to offer equity. The failure of traditional finance recover from the current recession is building the legal foundation to support future creativity.
Emerging Financial Organisms
Technology trends such as web-enabled cash micro-transactions, social networking with access control, and real time private company information will disrupt the opaqueness of the traditional finance industry. The power of the crowd can perfectly match demand and bring to life previously "unfundable" projects. Capital flows can bypass the broker-dealer all together, making financial power less concentrated in the hands of existing firms. Furthermore, the increasing automation of financial advisory services (see Axial Markets, Betterment, Credit Sesame), when combined with Big Data and free information, will transform the existing financial industry into a paradigm that better empowers people as creative individuals. Still, compliance and regulation are a huge barrier to innovation in the industry, and it is encouraging to see progress, however incremental.
The essay is very interesting. It's not capable of bearing out its
promised subject, because in fact regulation isn't changing very much
at all, it turns out. Some bills that aren't going to pass have been
introduced, and the SEC's enforcement mechanisms—never very
quick in dealing with even small, let alone large,
offenders—have not yet done more than open some investigations
of "innovative" ways of putting investors at a disadvantage. In
reality, your essay demonstrates instead a smaller point:
disintermediation affects financial services businesses in the 21st
century, including investment intermediaries. Eventually, though
certainly not now or soon, those changes will imperatively require
modification of a regulatory system built in the 20th century to
constrain intermediaries in the interest of protecting investors.
This is undoubtedly correct, though there is ample evidence that your
focus is too narrow in that: (1) you manage to write about financial
regulation now without mentioning the larger and more well-known
controversies about recent changes in financial industry regulation;
and (2) you describe the changes that interest you primarily from a
single perspective only: that of someone trying to get investment in
a personal proprietary technology business. How the changes
occurring in the disintermediation process might affect the process
of achieving regulation's primary goal, the protection of investors,
is ignored altogether. Because investors don't need protection from
you, the implication seems to be, they don't need protection at
all, and if investing in your business can be made easier, then the
world as a whole is unambiguously better off.
As in your first essay, where too you were the measure of all things,
there is an appealing simplicity in this. If the primary questions
we should be dealing with concern not the three billion children who
cannot afford the price of education, but people like you who can
afford a copy of Photoshop, or whether you will be allowed to buy
your first Porsche out of your online series A funding, this scope of
analysis is sufficient. Although I'm surprised that you could revise
this work in May 2012 without removing the now-absurd references to
the "Facebook Era" in the obsoleting of securities regulation.
Perhaps that's what you thought last November, which would not be a
particularly strong evidence of your shrewdness even then; now the
failure to reconsider the tone makes you sound completely tone deaf
altogether.
A fuller account of the actual transformation of finance in the
Internet society you could not give in 1,000 words, I believe. It is
a severe enough criticism that this law school does not contain a
course that attempts such an account even in fourteen weeks. (Every
time I proposed to teach one, you will not be surprised to hear,
deans and senior incumbent teachers scurried around to make up
reasons to prevent me. A decade ago I gave up trying. In August
2008 I wrote and in September 2008 presented to the faculty a paper
mentioning the inevitability of a major investment bank collapse
within weeks or months, which had as little effect as though I had
read box scores from the 1923 World Series instead.) But you begin
your account in the middle of the weeds instead of at the top of the
course, where you could use your 1,000 words to explain major
architectural features rather than details. The proper place to
begin, I think, is with the disappearance of money. From there, the
central role of trust in exchange can be seen. This allows one to
begin the analysis of the economy in which money is simply digital
signatures indicative of trust in ability to exchange, and securities
are actually signed guesses about future "earnings," that is, trust
allocations from customers minus trust allocations to suppliers,
workers and trusters. Building up all the subsequent propositions is
somewhat intricate and subtle work; most existing "thinkers" find it
simpler to pay no attention whatever to the fundamental changes,
concentrating their attention altogether on minor,
previously-relevant details. You have acquired the habit honestly,
but it disserves you.