ARTICLE
10 December 2020

New York Guidance On Mandatory Filing Of Form D

M
Mintz

Contributor

Mintz is a litigation powerhouse and business accelerator serving leaders in life sciences, private equity, sustainable energy, and technology. The world’s most innovative companies trust Mintz to provide expert advice, protect and monetize their IP, negotiate deals, source financing, and solve complex legal challenges. The firm has over 600 attorneys across offices in Boston, Los Angeles, Miami, New York, Washington, DC, San Francisco, San Diego, and Toronto.
On December 1, 2020, New York Attorney General Letitia James issued guidance regarding, among other things, securities issued to New York residents in private placements made pursuant to...
United States New York Corporate/Commercial Law

On December 1, 2020, New York Attorney General Letitia James issued guidance regarding, among other things, securities issued to New York residents in private placements made pursuant to Regulation D, Rule 506 under the Securities Act of 1933. The guidance comes after years of uncertainty about whether and how companies issuing securities to New York residents in private placements should or were required to comply with the Martin Act, which is New York's "blue sky" statute governing securities issuances within the state. 

Pursuant to the guidance, issuers selling "covered securities" (i.e., securities issued pursuant to a private placement exemption under Regulation D, Rule 506) must now file a completed Form D through the Electronic Filing Depository of the North American Association of Securities Administrators. Previously, it was the position of many law firms, including Mintz, as well as the New York State Bar Association (NYSBA), that compliance with the Martin Act's onerous filing requirements, including the filing of a Form 99, was prohibited by the National Securities Markets Improvement Act, constituting an impermissible regulatory regime running parallel to the Securities Act. Further, many New York practitioners, including the authors of the NYSBA paper, have taken the position that because Rule 506 offerings are private, and the Martin Act, on its own terms, only regulates offerings of securities "to the public," that the Martin Act can impose no requirements, regardless of preemption, including notice or Form D filing requirements.

The days of uncertainty are over. The new guidance makes it clear: if you offer securities in a private placement to New York residents relying on Regulation D, Rule 506, then you must file the Form D in New York.

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