Securities Exempt from Registration under the Securities Act of 1933

U.S. government securities — Treasuries — and municipal bonds are all exempt from registration.

Intrastate Offerings

An intrastate offering is an offering made only to the residents of a state by a corporation in that state. The offering must be registered in the state and must comply with SEC Rule 147:

Resale is permitted only:

Life Insurance

Most life insurance contracts are exempt, except for those contracts with investment risk, such as variable life policies and variable annuities.

Commercial Paper and Bankers Acceptances

Commercial paper is exempt from registration if its term is 270 days or less; and bankers acceptances, with a term of 180 days or less.

Regulation A

Regulation A of the Securities Act of 1933 (aka Reg A) exempts small offerings of securities from the regular SEC registration if these conditions are met:

Regulation A+

Regulation A has recently been expanded for companies in the United States or Canada by allowing offerings up to $50,000,000. The company must have a specific business plan or purpose, not just to be acquired in a merger or acquisition. This new regulation, called Regulation A+, implements Title IV of the JOBS Act by providing 2 tiers of offerings:

Companies with Tier 2 offerings must:

Tier 2 securities are exempt from the mandatory registration requirements of Section 12(g) if the issuer:

Sales by all security-holders cannot exceed 30% of an issuer’s Regulation A offering within the first 12 months following the initial offering. For offerings not exceeding $20 million, the issuer may choose Tier 1 or Tier 2. Regulation A+ also preempts state security laws regarding registration and qualification. When the issuer exceeds the dollar and Section 12(g) registration thresholds, it must register its securities within 2 years.

Private Placements

A private placement is the sale of securities to wealthy or sophisticated investors but not to the public. Private placements are exempted from SEC registration under Regulation D of the Securities Act. Some broker-dealers — sometimes called private placement agents — specialize in private placements. Nonetheless, private placement agents are required to be registered by the SEC even though the securities they sell are usually exempt from registration requirements.

Regulation D

The details of Reg D are explained in Rules 501 to 506. No public advertisements or solicitations for a Reg D issue were allowed, but the 2012 JOBS Act permitted public advertising in Reg D offerings if the securities are sold only to accredited investors and the issuer verifies their accreditation. Also, a tombstone ad may provide notice of the completion of an offering, but not the offering itself.

Rule 501: Definition of an Accredited Investor

Securities are exempt if sold to accredited investors, individuals or institutions with much money and the financial wherewithal to invest in risky unregistered securities. Accredited investors include: