Senate Republicans seek allowances for RIAs to manage pooled crowdfunding money

Senate Republicans seek allowances for RIAs to manage pooled crowdfunding money
GOP lawmakers also ask SEC to increase number of investors who qualify to buy private placements.
JUL 19, 2019

Senate Republicans are asking the Securities and Exchange Commission to expand the ability of small businesses to raise capital from ordinary investors by involving investment advisers. In a letter to SEC chairman Jay Clayton on Thursday, Republican members of the Senate Banking Committee said the agency should make a priority of helping start-ups engage in crowdfunding, a method of gathering investments online in small amounts from a large number of people. "An additional tool we encourage the commission to consider is allowing crowdfunding investors to pool their money into a fund advised by a registered investment adviser," wrote Senate Banking chairman Mike Crapo, R-Idaho, in a letter signed by his 12 GOP panel colleagues. The idea of aggregating crowdfunding investments is one that could appeal to state regulators as well, according to Michael Pieciak, commissioner of the Vermont Department of Financial Regulation and president of the North American Securities Administrators Association Inc. If investors put their money into a pool, it could relieve small businesses of having to deal with thousands of individual investors. It also could bolster investor protection by making a crowdfunding investment more diversified and liquid. "We're interested in exploring it," Mr. Pieciak said on the sidelines of an Alternative and Direct Investment Securities Association conference in Washington on Friday. "The details, obviously, have to be played out." Investor safeguards must go along with allowing them into the private pool, Mr. Pieciak said. "If you create those exemptions, think about individual or aggregate investment limits for people that don't meet the financial standards but have some other way of qualifying through a license or educational credential," he said. Other ways the GOP senators encouraged the SEC to allow more investors to participate in private offerings were by: expanding the definition of an accredited investor beyond income and net-worth thresholds to include qualifying education and expertise, enabling family offices meeting certain conditions to become accredited investors, and permitting more general solicitation and advertising surrounding Regulation D private placements. The senators in part were responding to a recent SEC comment request on easing restrictions on participation by ordinary investors in private markets. They're nudging the SEC to propose new regulations, according to Anya Coverman, senior vice president for government relations and general counsel at the Institute for Portfolio Alternatives. "It's the senators saying to the SEC we support the concept release and we urge you to bring that to the rulemaking process — sort of move this forward in an efficient way doing it through the regulatory process," Ms. Coverman said. "That's something the IPA and this industry supports." Enabling more investors to qualify to buy private securities is a priority for IPA and ADISA. "We are supportive of expanding the accredited investor definition to increase capital raise, which has a myriad of benefits for Main Street growth, with appropriate protections for the investor," said John Harrison, ADISA chief executive.

Latest News

Goldman leads wave of prediction market bans at financial firms
Goldman leads wave of prediction market bans at financial firms

As Goldman Sachs tightens rules on event contract trading, RIAs and hedge funds are weighing their own policies

Advisor moves: Baird recruits $600M veteran pair to director roles in North Carolina
Advisor moves: Baird recruits $600M veteran pair to director roles in North Carolina

Meanwhile, Wells Fargo lures defectors from UBS and JPMorgan to expand in the East Coast, while another bank aligns itself with RayJay's financial institutions division.

AI may be nudging some older workers into early retirement, study finds
AI may be nudging some older workers into early retirement, study finds

New research suggests AI-exposed workers over 55 are leaving jobs more often than before ChatGPT’s rise.

Wall Street banks promoting AI agents from research aids into digital coworkers
Wall Street banks promoting AI agents from research aids into digital coworkers

Agentic AI is landing in trading, treasury and wealth management roles across major banks, with advisory functions as the next frontier.

People moves: FiNet hires former LPL executive Andrew Harpp, Ellevest names new CIO
People moves: FiNet hires former LPL executive Andrew Harpp, Ellevest names new CIO

Wells Fargo affiliate and women-focused wealth firm both promote leadership as they scale advisor support.

SPONSORED Direct indexing webinar targets tax-loss harvesting amid market swings

Northern Trust’s Ken Lassner shows advisors how to convert volatility into after-tax portfolio gains

SPONSORED Who builds the income when the pension disappears?

Dan Biagini of American Equity says the steady decline of pensions, longer lifespans and a reset in interest rates are rewriting how advisors build retirement income