This presentation addresses Securities as they relate to Private Companies, including a discussion of: Investment Contracts, Trades, Types of Issuers, Private Placement Exemptions, National Instrument 45-106, Offering Memorandums and Hidden Disclosure Obligations for Non-Private Issuers.
3. What is a Security?
• Includes:
– Shares
– Any bond, debenture, note or other evidence of indebtedness
– Any document constituting evidence of an option, subscription or other
interest in or to a security
– Any agreement under which money received will be repaid or treated
as a subscription to shares, stock, units or interests at the option of the
recipient or of any person or company
– Any profit‐sharing agreement or certificate
– Any document, instrument or writing commonly known as a security
– Any investment contract
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4. Investment Contract
• SEC v. W. J. Howey (1946)
– Contract or transaction where a person invests with intention to earn a
profit
– Investment in a common enterprise
– The person is led to expect profits solely from the efforts of a
promoter or third party
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6. Investment Contract
• State Commissioner of Securities v. Hawaii Market Center Inc.
(1971)
• “Risk capital test”
– Investor furnishes initial value
– A portion of value is subject to risks of the enterprise
– Investment is induced by a promise leading to a reasonable
expectation that a benefit will accrue
– Investor does not have right to exercise practical and actual control
over management
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7. Trade
• Includes:
– Any sale or disposition of a security for valuable consideration,
whether the terms of payment are on margin, installment or
otherwise, but does not include
– Any act, advertisement, solicitation, conduct or negotiation made
directly or indirectly in furtherance of anything referred to above
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8. Distribution
• When used in relation to trading in securities, means
– A trade in securities of an issuer that have not been previously issued
– A trade by or on behalf of an issuer in previously issued securities of
that issuer that have been redeemed or purchased by or donated to
that issuer
– A trade in previously issued securities of an issuer from the holdings
of a control person
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10. Private Issuer
• Means an Issuer:
– That is not a reporting issuer or an investment fund,
– Whose securities (except non‐convertible debt):
• Are subject to transfer restriction contained in the issuers constating
documents or security holders’ agreement; and
• Are owned by not more that 50 people, exclusive of employees and
former employees, and
– Has only distributed designated securities to the permitted list of
investors [i.e. relatives, close friends, accredited investors – s. 2.4(2)].
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11. Reporting Issuer
• Means an Issuer
– That has filed a prospectus and obtained a receipt for it,
– That has shares listed on a stock exchange recognized for that purpose
(TSX Venture Exchange),
– That has exchanged its securities in an amalgamation, arrangement or
similar transaction with a reporting issuer, or
– That is declared to be a reporting issuer by order of the Commission.
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12. Control Person
• Means any person or company that holds or is one of a
combination of persons or companies that holds:
– A sufficient number of any of the securities of an issuer so as to affect
materially the control of that issuer, or
– More than 20% of the outstanding voting securities of an issuer except
where there is evidence showing that the holding of those securities
does not affect materially the control of that issuer
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15. General
• All trades are subject to securities legislation, whether entity
issuing securities is a reporting issuer in that jurisdiction or not;
• Definition of “trade” in securities legislation includes any act,
advertisement, solicitation, conduct or negotiation directly or
indirectly in furtherance of a trade;
• Person (company) who engages in these activities, or any
“trading” activities, must comply with the securities legislation
of each jurisdiction in which the trade occurs.
• Multi‐jurisdiction trades: e.g.: distribution from a person in
Alberta to a purchaser in BC may be considered a trade in both
jurisdictions (filing requirement in both locations).
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16. Responsibility for Compliance
• The person (entity) distributing or trading securities is
responsible for determining when an exemption is available
• The person may rely on factual representations by the
purchaser, provided that the person has no reasonable
grounds to believe the representations are false
• The person (entity) distributing or trading securities is
responsible for determining whether, given the facts available,
the exemption is available
• Important to get facts/specifics/particulars of how the person
fits within the exemption and thus how the exemption applies.
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18. Exemptions: 1) Private Issuer
• Is not a reporting issuer or an investment fund;
• Its securities, other than non‐convertible debt:
– Are subject to transfer restriction contained in the issuer’s constating
documents or shareholders agreement (USA); and
– Are held by not more that 50 people, exclusive of employees and
former employees;
– Key is that the private issuer must not be a member of the “public” as
defined in case law;
– If private issuer distributes securities under another exemption (i.e. –
OM), it will no longer be a private issuer; and
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19. Private Issuer (cont’d)
• Has only distributed securities to the following permitted list
of investors:
– Director, officer, employee, founder or control person
– Spouse, parent, grandparent, brother, sister, or child of either a
director, senior officer, founder or control person or of a spouse of
such director, senior officer, founder or control person
– Close personal friend or close business associate of a director, senior
officer, founder or control person
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20. 2) Accredited Investor
• Includes:
– An individual, either alone or with a spouse, that has “financial assets”
(cash, securities, or a contract of insurance – generally liquid or easy to
liquidate) of at least $1,000,000 (treat spouses as a single investing
unit);
– An individual with net income before tax (in the last two years) of at
least $200,000 (or $300,000 combined with spouse) and reasonably
expects to exceed that income level in the current calendar year; or
– A company that is wholly owned by one or more accredited investors
or has net assets of $5,000,000.
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21. 3) Friends, Family and Business Associates
• Includes:
– A director, executive officer or control person of the issuer or an
affiliate of the issuer;
– A spouse, parent, grandparent, brother, sister or child of a director,
executive officer or control person;
– A parent, grandparent, brother, sister or child of a spouse of a director,
executive officer or control person;
– A close personal friend or a close business associate of a director,
executive officer or control person;
– A founder of the issuer or a spouse, parent, grandparent, brother,
sister, child, close personal friend or close business associate of a
founder;
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22. Friends, Family and Business Associates
(cont’d)
– A parent, grandparent, brother, sister or child of the spouse of a
founder;
– A company of which the majority of the voting securities are owned
by, or a majority of the directors are, persons described above; and
– A trust or estate of which all of the beneficiaries are or a majority of
the trustees are persons described above.
• In Saskatchewan, investors relying on this exemption must sign
a risk acknowledgement form.
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23. Definition of a Close Personal Friend
• An individual who knows the director, executive officer,
founder or control person well enough and has known them
for a sufficient period of time to be in a position to assess their
capabilities and trustworthiness.
– Can include family members not already specifically identified or who
may not satisfy all criteria
– Relationship must be direct
• An individual is NOT a close personal friend solely because the
individual is
– A relative;
– A member of the same organization, association or religious group, or
– A client, customer, former client or former customer.
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24. Definition of a Close Business Associate
• An individual who has had sufficient prior business dealings
with the director, executive officer, founder or control person
of the issuer to be in a position to assess their capabilities and
trustworthiness
• An individual is not a close business associate solely because
the individual is:
– A member of the same organization, association or religious group; or
– A client, customer, former client or former customer
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26. 4) Offering Memorandum (“OM”)
• The issuer must prepare an offering memorandum in the form
mandated by the instrument
• There is no limit on the number of investors that can
participate
• There is no limit on how often you use the exemption
• In Alberta (and some other provinces), if a purchaser invests
more than $10,000, they must be an “eligible investor” to rely
on the OM exemption
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27. OM (cont’d)
• A two day right of rescission
• Each subscriber is required to complete a risk
acknowledgement form
• There is a right of action for rescission or damages in the
event of a misrepresentation in the OM
– Rescission: 180 days of signing the agreement
– Damages: the earlier of 180 days of learning of the misrepresentation
or 3 years after signing the purchase agreement.
• Form of OM must comply with form set out in securities
regulations
• OM must be filed with Securities Commission
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28. Eligible Investor
• Definition of “Eligible Investor” someone: (i) who has obtained
advice from an eligibility adviser (someone who is registered
as investment dealer) who is authorized to give advice with
respect to the type of security being distributed or traded; (ii)
who has net assets of $400,000; or (iii) who has pre‐tax
income (in past two years and expectation to continue in
current year) of $75,000, or $125,000 combined with a spouse.
Eligible Investor: It would be inappropriate for an issuer to try
to circumvent the $10,000 threshold by dividing a subscription
in excess of $10,000 by one purchaser into a number of
smaller subscriptions of $10,000 or less that are made directly
or indirectly by the same purchaser.
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34. Applicable Law – ABCA
• Section 149 – If not a Private Issuer
– Must give Form of Proxy
• Section 150 – If providing Proxy and more than 15
shareholders
– Must provide Form of Information Circular
• Regulation 19 – the Form of (i) Proxy and (ii) Information
Circular are as required under the Securities
Act (Alberta)
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36. NI 51‐102 – Content of From of Proxy
• Section 9.4:
– Disclose in Bold who Solicited the Proxy (e.g. Management)
– Disclose in Bold that you can appoint a designated person to represent
you at meeting
– Provide options for voting FOR or Against or Withheld – as applicable
– Virtually identical to Form used by Reporting Issuers
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37. NI 51‐102 F5 – Form of Information Circular
• NI 51‐102F5:
– Same disclosure used by Reporting Issuers
– Very onerous disclosure with 16 Items to cover
– Requirement to identify Principal Shareholders
– Requirement to discuss Executive Compensation (see NI 51‐102F6)
– Requirement to detail any penalties and sanctions of directors and
officers which may be something you were not expecting
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38. NI 51‐102F6 – Executive Compensation
• NI 51‐102F6
– Compensation Discussion and Analysis
– Onerous – must detail prior 3 years of executive compensation of each
NEO (Named Executive Officer)
– Incentive Plan Awards
– Disclose all stock option and other convertible security plan awards
– Termination and Changes of Control
– Executive employment agreement termination provisions need to be
detailed and details of the agreements e.g. compensation details
– Director Compensation
– Director compensation needs to be disclosed
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