On April 27, 2016, the House of Representatives passed the Helping Angels Lead Our Startups Act (H.R. 4498) (the "HALOS Act"), which was first introduced on April 16, 2015. The HALOS Act directs the SEC to amend Regulation D under the Securities Act to make the prohibition against general solicitation or general advertising inapplicable to events with specified sponsors (including angel investor groups not connected to broker-dealers or investment advisers) where:

  • presentations or communications are made by or on behalf of an issuer;
  • the advertising does not refer to any specific offering of securities by the issuer;
  • the sponsor does not engage in certain activities (such as offering investment recommendations or advice to attendees); and
  • no specific information regarding a securities offering is communicated (other than that the issuer is in the process of offering or planning to offer securities, including the type and amount of securities being offered).

In addition, the HALOS Act (1) limits the types of fees ''demo day'' sponsors can collect (cannot receive any compensation for making introductions between investors attending the event and issuers, or for investment negotiations between such parties), (2) limits attendance at "demo days" to only individuals with financial sophistication (members of an angel investor group or accredited investors), and (3) requires that an issuer not be in bankruptcy or receivership, an investment company, or a blank check, blind pool or shell company. H.R. 4498 is available at: https://www.congress.gov/114/bills/hr4498/BILLS-114hr4498rh.pdf

The HALOS Act would incorporate into regulation issues as to which the SEC Staff already has provided guidance either in the form of no-action letter guidance (on demo days, for example) or in Compliance and Disclosure Interpretations.

On April 21, 2016, the Fair Access to Investment Research Act of 2016 (H.R. 5019) (the "Fair Access to Investment Research Act") was introduced in the House of Representative. The Fair Access to Investment Research Act directs the SEC to amend Rule 139 under the Securities Act to provide that a covered investment fund research report that is published or distributed by a broker-dealer will be deemed, for purposes of Sections 2(a)(10) and 5(c) of the Securities Act, not to constitute an offer for sale or an offer to sell a security that is the subject of an offering pursuant to a registration statement that is effective (even if the broker-dealer is participating or will participate in the registered offering of the covered investment fund's securities). H.R. 5019 is available at: https://www.congress.gov/114/bills/hr5019/BILLS-114hr5019ih.pdf

Because of the generality of this update, the information provided herein may not be applicable in all situations and should not be acted upon without specific legal advice based on particular situations.

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