[House Report 119-133]
[From the U.S. Government Publishing Office]
119th Congress } { Report
HOUSE OF REPRESENTATIVES
1st Session } { 119-133
======================================================================
HELPING STARTUPS CONTINUE TO GROW ACT
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June 4, 2025.--Committed to the Committee of the Whole House on the
State of the Union and ordered to be printed
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Mr. Hill of Arkansas, from the Committee on Financial Services,
submitted the following
R E P O R T
together with
MINORITY VIEWS
[To accompany H.R. 3323]
The Committee on Financial Services, to whom was referred
the bill (H.R. 3323) to update the definition of an emerging
growth company, and for other purposes, having considered the
same, reports favorably thereon with an amendment and
recommends that the bill as amended do pass.
CONTENTS
Page
Purpose and Summary.............................................. 2
Background and Need for Legislation.............................. 2
Committee Consideration.......................................... 3
Related Hearings................................................. 4
Committee Votes.................................................. 4
Committee Oversight Findings..................................... 6
Performance Goals and Objectives................................. 6
Committee Cost Estimate.......................................... 6
New Budget Authority and CBO Cost Estimate....................... 6
Unfunded Mandates Statement...................................... 6
Earmark Statement................................................ 6
Federal Advisory Committee Act Statement......................... 6
Applicability to the Legislative Branch.......................... 7
Duplication of Federal Programs.................................. 7
Section-by-Section Analysis of the Legislation................... 7
Changes in Existing Law Made by the Bill, as Reported............ 7
Minority Views................................................... 53
The amendment is as follows:
Strike all after the enacting clause and insert the
following:
SECTION 1. SHORT TITLE.
This Act may be cited as the ``Helping Startups Continue To Grow
Act''.
SEC. 2. EMERGING GROWTH COMPANY CRITERIA.
(a) Securities Act of 1933.--Section 2(a)(19) of the Securities Act
of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77b(a)(19)) is amended--
(1) by striking ``$1,000,000,000'' each place such term
appears and inserting ``$3,000,000,000'';
(2) in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking ``fifth'' and inserting ``10-year'';
and
(B) by adding ``or'' at the end;
(3) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``; or'' and inserting a
period; and
(4) by striking subparagraph (D).
(b) Securities Exchange Act of 1934.--Section 3(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78c(a)) is amended, in the first
paragraph (80)--
(1) by striking ``$1,000,000,000'' each place such term
appears and inserting ``$3,000,000,000'';
(2) in subparagraph (B)--
(A) by striking ``fifth'' and inserting ``10-year'';
and
(B) by adding ``or'' at the end;
(3) in subparagraph (C), by striking ``; or'' and inserting a
period; and
(4) by striking subparagraph (D).
(c) Technical Correction.--
(1) Section 3(a) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15
U.S.C. 78c(a)) is amended by redesignating the second paragraph
(80) as paragraph (81).
(2) Section 4A(a)(1)(B) of the Securities Act of 1933 (77d-
1(a)(1)(B)) is amended by striking ``section 3(a)(80)'' and
inserting ``section 3(a)''.
Purpose and Summary
H.R. 3323, the Helping Startups Continue to Grow Act, was
introduced on May 13, 2025, by Representative Bryan Steil (WI-
01). H.R. 3323 provides an extension of certain exemptions and
reduced disclosure requirements for companies that were
emerging growth companies (EGCs) and continue to meet all other
requirements for EGCs except for the five-year restriction.
This bill also increases the maximum threshold amounts to
qualify as an EGC to $3 billion and removes the
disqualification for ``large accelerated filers.''
Background and Need for Legislation
By granting EGCs a temporary ``on-ramp'' status, Title I of
the JOBS Act encourages small companies to go public while
ensuring that they graduate to full regulatory compliance as
they grow large enough to sustain the compliance infrastructure
typical of mature companies.\1\ The JOBS Act's IPO on-ramp
succeeded by providing accommodations that streamlined the IPO
process and promoted efficiency without compromising investor
protection. The IPO on-ramp accommodations are limited,
measured and based on analogous pre-existing principles or
practices in federal securities regulation.
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
\1\Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, Pub. L. No. 113-233,
Sec. 101, 127 Stat. 2896, 2896 (2013) (codified as amended at 26 U.S.C.
Sec. 41).
---------------------------------------------------------------------------
Congress should build off this success, by increasing the
threshold amounts to qualify as an EGC, extending the maximum
amount of time an issuer can remain an EGC, and removing the
disqualification for large accelerated filers. The proposed
enhancements to the IPO on-ramp represent a balanced approach
to promote IPO activity without compromising investor
protections, including all of the disclosure and liability
requirements that continue to remain in place for all
companies.
Committee Consideration
115TH CONGRESS
On June 15, 2018, Representative Keith Rothfus (R-PA)
introduced H.R. 6130, the Helping Startups Continue to Grow
Act. This bill is an earlier iteration of H.R. 3323. The bill
was referred solely to the Committee on Financial Services. The
Committee held a hearing to examine matters relating to H.R.
6130 on May 23, 2018. On June 21, 2018, the Committee on
Financial Services ordered H.R. 6130 to be favorably reported
to the House of Representatives by a recorded vote of 32-23.
116TH CONGRESS
On October 30, 2019, Representative Bryan Steil (R-WI)
introduced H.R. 4918, the Helping Startups Continue to Grow
Act, with Representatives French Hill (R-AR), Steve Stivers (R-
OH), Lance Gooden (R-TX), and Trey Hollingsworth (R-IN) as
original cosponsors. Representative Scott Tipton (R-CO) was
added subsequently as a cosponsor. This bill is an earlier
iteration of H.R. 3323. The bill was referred solely to the
Committee on Financial Services.
117TH CONGRESS
On May 20, 2021, Representative Steil introduced H.R. 3448,
the Helping Startups Continue to Grow Act, with Representatives
Hollingsworth and Hill as original cosponsors. Representative
David Joyce (R-OH) was added subsequently as a cosponsor. This
bill is an earlier iteration of H.R. 3323. The bill was
referred solely to the Committee on Financial Services. In
addition, Senator Tim Scott (R-SC) introduced S. 4992, a
companion to H.R. 3448, with Senator Mark Warner (D-VA) as an
original cosponsor.
118TH CONGRESS
On April 13, 2023, Representative Steil introduced H.R.
2624, the Helping Startups Continue to Grow Act. This bill is
an earlier iteration of H.R. 3323. The bill was referred solely
to the Committee on Financial Services.
119TH CONGRESS
On May 13, 2025, Representative Steil introduced H.R. 3323,
the Helping Startups Continue to Grow Act, with Representative
Ann Wagner (R-MO) as an original cosponsor. Representative Sam
Liccardo (D-CA) was added subsequently as a cosponsor. The bill
was referred solely to the Committee on Financial Services. The
bill was attached to the February 26, 2025, hearing titled
``The Future of American Capital: Strengthening Public and
Private Markets by Increasing Investor Access and Facilitating
Capital Formation'' and the March 25, 2025, hearing titled,
``Beyond Silicon Valley: Expanding Access to Capital Across
America.''
On May 20, 2025, the committee met in open session to
consider, among others, H.R. 3323. The Committee ordered H.R.
3323, as amended, to be reported favorably to the House of
Representatives.
Related Hearings
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(6) of rule XIII of the Rules of the
House of Representatives, the following hearings were used to
develop H.R. 3323:
The Capital Markets Subcommittee of the Committee on
Financial Services held a February 26, 2025, hearing titled
``The Future of American Capital: Strengthening Public and
Private Markets by Increasing Investor Access and Facilitating
Capital Formation'' and the Full Committee held a March 25,
2025, hearing titled, ``Beyond Silicon Valley: Expanding Access
to Capital Across America.'' A discussion draft version of the
bill was attached to both hearings. The following witnesses
testified at the February 26, 2025, hearing: Mr. Andrew
Barnell, CEO and Co-Founder, Geneoscopy; Mr. McKeever Conwell,
Founder and Managing Partner, RareBreed Ventures; Ms. Rebecca
Kacaba, CEO and Co-Founder, DealMaker; Ms. Anna Pinedo,
Partner, Mayer Brown; and Ms. Alexandra Thornton, Senior
Director, Financial Regulation, Center for American Progress.
The following witnesses testified at the March 25, 2025,
hearing: Mr. Steve Case, Chairman and CEO, Revolution LLC; Mr.
Bill Newell, Senior Business Advisor & Former CEO, Sutro
Biopharma; Ms. Candice Matthews Brackeen, General Partner,
Lightship Capital; Mr. Joel Trotter, Partner, Latham & Watkins
LLP; and Ms. Amanda Senn, Director of the Alabama Securities
Commission.
On May 20, 2025, the Committee met in open session to
consider, among others, H.R. 3323. The Committee ordered H.R.
3323, as amended, to be favorably reported to the House of
Representatives.
Committee Votes
Clause 3(b) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of
Representatives requires the Committee Report to include for
each record vote on a motion to report the measure or matter
and on any amendments offered to the measure or matter the
total number of votes for and against and the names of the
Members voting for and against.
On May 20, 2025, the Committee ordered H.R. 3323, as
amended, to be reported favorably to the House by a recorded
vote of 31 yeas and 20 nays, a quorum being present. (Record
Vote No. FC-119).
Before the question to report was called, the Committee
adopted an amendment in the nature of a substitute, designated
STEIWI_020, which made minor edits and technical changes,
offered by Representative Steil. The amendment was adopted by
voice vote, a quorum being present.
[GRAPHIC(S) NOT AVAILABLE IN TIFF FORMAT]
Committee Oversight Findings
Pursuant to clause 3(c) of rule XIII of the Rules of the
House of Representatives, the findings and recommendations of
the Committee, based on oversight activities under clause
2(b)(1) of rule X of the Rules of the House of Representatives,
are incorporated in the descriptive portions of this report.
Performance Goals and Objectives
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(4) of rule XIII of the Rules of the
House of Representatives, the goal of H.R. 3323 is to extend
certain financial exemptions and reduced disclosure
requirements to enable EGCs to continue growth trajectories.
Committee Cost Estimate
Clause 3(d)(1) of rule XIII of the Rules of the House of
Representatives requires an estimate and a comparison of the
costs that would be incurred in carrying out H.R. 3323. The
Committee has requested but not received a cost estimate from
the Director of the Congressional Budget Office. However,
pursuant to clause 3(d)(1) of House rule XIII, the Committee
will adopt as its own the cost estimate by the Director of the
Congressional Budget Office once it has been prepared.
New Budget Authority and CBO Cost Estimate
With respect to the requirements of clause 3(c)(2) of rule
XIII of the Rules of the House of Representatives and section
308(a) of the Congressional Budget Act of 1974 and with respect
to requirements of clause 3(c)(3) of rule XIII of the Rules of
the House of Representatives and section 402 of the
Congressional Budget Act of 1974, a cost estimate was not made
available to the Committee in time for the filing of this
report. The Chairman of the Committee shall cause such estimate
to be printed in the Congressional Record upon its receipt by
the Committee.
Unfunded Mandates Statement
The Committee has requested but not received from the
Director of the Congressional Budget Office an estimate of the
Federal mandates pursuant to section 423 of the Unfunded
Mandates Reform Act. The Committee will adopt the estimate once
it has been prepared by the Director.
Earmark Statement
With respect to clause 9 of rule XXI of the Rules of the
House of Representatives, the Committee has carefully reviewed
the provisions of the resolution and states that the provisions
of the bill do not contain any congressional earmarks, limited
tax benefits, or limited tariff benefits within the meaning of
the rule.
Federal Advisory Committee Act Statement
No advisory committees within the meaning of section 5(b)
of the Federal Advisory Committee Act were created by this
legislation.
Applicability to the Legislative Branch
The Committee finds that the legislation does not relate to
the terms and conditions of employment or access to public
services or accommodations within the meaning of section
102(b)(3) of the Congressional Accountability Act.
Duplication of Federal Programs
Pursuant to clause 3(c)(5) of rule XIII of the Rules of the
House of Representatives, the Committee states that no
provision of the bill establishes or reauthorizes a program of
the Federal Government known to be duplicative of another
Federal program, including any program that was included in a
report to Congress pursuant to section 21 of the Public Law
111-139 or the most recent Catalog of Federal Domestic
Assistance.
Section-by-Section Analysis of the Legislation
Section 1. Short title
Section 1 provides the short title is the ``Helping
Startups Continue To Grow Act.''
Section 2. Emerging growth company criteria
Section 2 amends the Securities Act of 1933 by increasing
the maximum threshold amounts to qualify as an EGC from $1
billion to $3 billion, extending the time period of exemptions
granted under the Act from five years to ten years, and removes
the disqualification for large accelerated filers.
Changes in Existing Law Made by the Bill, as Reported
In compliance with clause 3(e) of rule XIII of the Rules of
the House of Representatives, changes in existing law made by
the bill, as reported, are shown as follows (existing law
proposed to be omitted is enclosed in black brackets, new
matter is printed in italics, and existing law in which no
change is proposed is shown in roman):
SECURITIES ACT OF 1933
TITLE I--
* * * * * * *
definitions
Sec. 2. (a) Definitions.--When used in this title, unless the
context otherwise requires--
(1) The term ``security'' means any note, stock,
treasury stock, security future, security-based swap,
bond, debenture, evidence of indebtedness, certificate
of interest or participation in any profit-sharing
agreement, collateral-trust certificate,
preorganization certificate or subscription,
transferable share, investment contract, voting-trust
certificate, certificate of deposit for a security,
fractional undivided interest in oil, gas, or other
mineral rights, any put, call, straddle, option, or
privilege on any security, certificate of deposit, or
group or index of securities (including any interest
therein or based on the value thereof), or any put,
call, straddle, option, or privilege entered into on a
national securities exchange relating to foreign
currency, or, in general, any interest or instrument
commonly known as a ``security'', or any certificate of
interest or participation in, temporary or interim
certificate for, receipt for, guarantee of, or warrant
or right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the
foregoing.
(2) The term ``person'' means an individual, a
corporation, a partnership, an association, a joint-
stock company, a trust, any unincorporated
organization, or a government or political subdivision
thereof. As used in this paragraph the term ``trust''
shall include only a trust where the interest or
interests of the beneficiary or beneficiaries are
evidenced by a security.
(3) The term ``sale'' or ``sell'' shall include every
contract of sale or disposition of a security or
interest in a security, for value. The term ``offer to
sell'', ``offer for sale'', or ``offer'' shall include
every attempt or offer to dispose of, or solicitation
of an offer to buy, a security or interest in a
security, for value. The terms defined in this
paragraph and the term ``offer to buy'' as used in
subsection (c) of section 5 shall not include
preliminary negotiations or agreements between an
issuer (or any person directly or indirectly
controlling or controlled by an issuer, or under direct
or indirect common control with an issuer) and any
underwriter or among underwriters who are or are to be
in privity of contract with an issuer (or any person
directly or indirectly controlling or controlled by an
issuer, or under direct or indirect common control with
an issuer). Any security given or delivered with, or as
a bonus on account of, any purchase of securities or
any other thing, shall be conclusively presumed to
constitute a part of the subject of such purchase and
to have been offered and sold for value. The issue or
transfer of a right or privilege, when originally
issued or transferred with a security, giving the
holder of such security the right to convert such
security into another security of the same issuer or of
another person, or giving a right to subscribe to
another security of the same issuer or of another
person, which right cannot be exercised until some
future date, shall not be deemed to be an offer or sale
of such other security; but the issue or transfer of
such other security upon the exercise of such right of
conversion or subscription shall be deemed a sale of
such other security. Any offer or sale of a security
futures product by or on behalf of the issuer of the
securities underlying the security futures product, an
affiliate of the issuer, or an underwriter, shall
constitute a contract for sale of, sale of, offer for
sale, or offer to sell the underlying securities. Any
offer or sale of a security-based swap by or on behalf
of the issuer of the securities upon which such
security-based swap is based or is referenced, an
affiliate of the issuer, or an underwriter, shall
constitute a contract for sale of, sale of, offer for
sale, or offer to sell such securities. The publication
or distribution by a broker or dealer of a research
report about an emerging growth company that is the
subject of a proposed public offering of the common
equity securities of such emerging growth company
pursuant to a registration statement that the issuer
proposes to file, or has filed, or that is effective
shall be deemed for purposes of paragraph (10) of this
subsection and section 5(c) not to constitute an offer
for sale or offer to sell a security, even if the
broker or dealer is participating or will participate
in the registered offering of the securities of the
issuer. As used in this paragraph, the term ``research
report'' means a written, electronic, or oral
communication that includes information, opinions, or
recommendations with respect to securities of an issuer
or an analysis of a security or an issuer, whether or
not it provides information reasonably sufficient upon
which to base an investment decision.
(4) The term ``issuer'' means every person who issues
or proposes to issue any security; except that with
respect to certificates of deposit, voting-trust
certificates, or collateral-trust certificates, or with
respect to certificates of interest or shares in an
unincorporated investment trust not having a board of
directors (or persons performing similar functions) or
of the fixed, restricted management, or unit type, the
term ``issuer'' means the person or persons performing
the acts and assuming the duties of depositor or
manager pursuant to the provisions of the trust or
other agreement or instrument under which such
securities are issued; except that in the case of an
unincorporated association which provides by its
articles for limited liability of any or all of its
members, or in the case of a trust, committee, or other
legal entity, the trustees or members thereof shall not
be individually liable as issuers of any security
issued by the association, trust, committee, or other
legal entity; except that with respect to equipment-
trust certificates or like securities, the term
``issuer'' means the person by whom the equipment or
property is or is to be used; and except that with
respect to fractional undivided interests in oil, gas,
or other mineral rights, the term ``issuer'' means the
owner of any such right or of any interest in such
right (whether whole or fractional) who creates
fractional interests therein for the purpose of public
offering.
(5) The term ``Commission'' means the Securities and
Exchange Commission.
(6) The term ``Territory'' means Puerto Rico, the
Virgin Islands, and the insular possessions of the
United States.
(7) The term ``interstate commerce'' means trade or
commerce in securities or any transportation or
communication relating thereto among the several States
or between the District of Columbia or any Territory of
the United States and any State or other Territory, or
between any foreign country and any State, Territory,
or the District of Columbia, or within the District of
Columbia.
(8) The term ``registration statement'' means the
statement provided for in section 6, and includes any
amendment thereto and any report, document, or
memorandum filed as part of such statement or
incorporated therein by reference.
(9) The term ``write'' or ``written'' shall include
printed, lithographed, or any means of graphic
communication.
(10) The term ``prospectus'' means any prospectus,
notice, circular, advertisement, letter, or
communication, written or by radio or television, which
offers any security for sale or confirms the sale of
any security; except that (a) a communication sent or
given after the effective date of the registration
statement (other than a prospectus permitted under
subsection (b) of section 10) shall not be deemed a
prospectus if it is proved that prior to or at the same
time with such communication a written prospectus
meeting the requirements of subsection (a) of section
10 at the time of such communication was sent or given
to the person to whom the communication was made, and
(b) a notice, circular, advertisement, letter, or
communication in respect of a security shall not be
deemed to be a prospectus if it states from whom a
written prospectus meeting the requirements of section
10 may be obtained and, in addition, does no more than
identify the security, state the price thereof, state
by whom orders will be executed, and contain such other
information as the Commission, by rules or regulations
deemed necessary or appropriate in the public interest
and for the protection of investors, and subject to
such terms and conditions as may be prescribed therein,
may permit.
(11) The term ``underwriter'' means any person who
has purchased from an issuer with a view to, or offers
or sells for an issuer in connection with, the
distribution of any security, or participates or has a
direct or indirect participation in any such
undertaking, or participates or has a participation in
the direct or indirect underwriting of any such
undertaking; but such term shall not include a person
whose interest is limited to a commission from an
underwriter or dealer not in excess of the usual and
customary distributors' or sellers' commission. As used
in this paragraph the term ``issuer'' shall include, in
addition to an issuer, any person directly or
indirectly controlling or controlled by the issuer, or
any person under direct or indirect common control with
the issuer.
(12) The term ``dealer'' means any person who engages
either for all or part of his time, directly or
indirectly, as agent, broker, or principal, in the
business of offering, buying, selling, or otherwise
dealing or trading in securities issued by another
person.
(13) The term ``insurance company'' means a company
which is organized as an insurance company, whose
primary and predominant business activity is the
writing of insurance or the reinsuring of risks
underwritten by insurance companies, and which is
subject to supervision by the insurance commissioner,
or a similar official or agency, of a State or
territory or the District of Columbia; or any receiver
or similar official or any liquidating agent for such
company, in his capacity as such.
(14) The term ``separate account'' means an account
established and maintained by an insurance company
pursuant to the laws of any State or territory of the
United States, the District of Columbia, or of Canada
or any province thereof, under which income, gains and
losses, whether or not realized, from assets allocated
to such account, are, in accordance with the applicable
contract, credited to or charged against such account
without regard to other income, gains, or losses of the
insurance company.
(15) The term ``accredited investor'' shall mean--
(i) a bank as defined in section 3(a)(2)
whether acting in its individual or fiduciary
capacity; an insurance company as defined in
paragraph (13) of this subsection; an
investment company registered under the
Investment Company Act of 1940 or a business
development company as defined in section
2(a)(48) of that Act; a Small Business
Investment Company licensed by the Small
Business Administration; or an employee benefit
plan, including an individual retirement
account, which is subject to the provisions of
the Employee Retirement Income Security Act of
1974, if the investment decision is made by a
plan fiduciary, as defined in section 3(21) of
such Act, which is either a bank, insurance
company, or registered investment adviser; or
(ii) any person who, on the basis of such
factors as financial sophistication, net worth,
knowledge, and experience in financial matters,
or amount of assets under management qualifies
as an accredited investor under rules and
regulations which the Commission shall
prescribe.
(16) The terms ``security future'', ``narrow-based
security index'', and ``security futures product'' have
the same meanings as provided in section 3(a)(55) of
the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
(17) The terms ``swap'' and ``security-based swap''
have the same meanings as in section 1a of the
Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a).
(18) The terms ``purchase'' or ``sale'' of a
security-based swap shall be deemed to mean the
execution, termination (prior to its scheduled maturity
date), assignment, exchange, or similar transfer or
conveyance of, or extinguishing of rights or
obligations under, a security-based swap, as the
context may require.
(19) The term ``emerging growth company'' means an
issuer that had total annual gross revenues of less
than [$1,000,000,000] $3,000,000,000 (as such amount is
indexed for inflation every 5 years by the Commission
to reflect the change in the Consumer Price Index for
All Urban Consumers published by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, setting the threshold to the nearest
1,000,000) during its most recently completed fiscal
year. An issuer that is an emerging growth company as
of the first day of that fiscal year shall continue to
be deemed an emerging growth company until the earliest
of--
(A) the last day of the fiscal year of the
issuer during which it had total annual gross
revenues of [$1,000,000,000] $3,000,000,000 (as
such amount is indexed for inflation every 5
years by the Commission to reflect the change
in the Consumer Price Index for All Urban
Consumers published by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, setting the threshold to the
nearest 1,000,000) or more;
(B) the last day of the fiscal year of the
issuer following the [fifth] 10-year
anniversary of the date of the first sale of
common equity securities of the issuer pursuant
to an effective registration statement under
this title; or
(C) the date on which such issuer has, during
the previous 3-year period, issued more than
[$1,000,000,000] $3,000,000,000 in non-
convertible debt[; or].
[(D) the date on which such issuer is deemed
to be a ``large accelerated filer'', as defined
in section 240.12b-2 of title 17, Code of
Federal Regulations, or any successor thereto.]
(b) Consideration of Promotion of Efficiency, Competition,
and Capital Formation.--Whenever pursuant to this title the
Commission is engaged in rulemaking and is required to consider
or determine whether an action is necessary or appropriate in
the public interest, the Commission shall also consider, in
addition to the protection of investors, whether the action
will promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation.
* * * * * * *
SEC. 4A. REQUIREMENTS WITH RESPECT TO CERTAIN SMALL TRANSACTIONS.
(a) Requirements on Intermediaries.--A person acting as an
intermediary in a transaction involving the offer or sale of
securities for the account of others pursuant to section 4(6)
shall--
(1) register with the Commission as--
(A) a broker; or
(B) a funding portal (as defined in [section
3(a)(80)] section 3(a) of the Securities
Exchange Act of 1934);
(2) register with any applicable self-regulatory
organization (as defined in section 3(a)(26) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934);
(3) provide such disclosures, including disclosures
related to risks and other investor education
materials, as the Commission shall, by rule, determine
appropriate;
(4) ensure that each investor--
(A) reviews investor-education information,
in accordance with standards established by the
Commission, by rule;
(B) positively affirms that the investor
understands that the investor is risking the
loss of the entire investment, and that the
investor could bear such a loss; and
(C) answers questions demonstrating--
(i) an understanding of the level of
risk generally applicable to
investments in startups, emerging
businesses, and small issuers;
(ii) an understanding of the risk of
illiquidity; and
(iii) an understanding of such other
matters as the Commission determines
appropriate, by rule;
(5) take such measures to reduce the risk of fraud
with respect to such transactions, as established by
the Commission, by rule, including obtaining a
background and securities enforcement regulatory
history check on each officer, director, and person
holding more than 20 percent of the outstanding equity
of every issuer whose securities are offered by such
person;
(6) not later than 21 days prior to the first day on
which securities are sold to any investor (or such
other period as the Commission may establish), make
available to the Commission and to potential investors
any information provided by the issuer pursuant to
subsection (b);
(7) ensure that all offering proceeds are only
provided to the issuer when the aggregate capital
raised from all investors is equal to or greater than a
target offering amount, and allow all investors to
cancel their commitments to invest, as the Commission
shall, by rule, determine appropriate;
(8) make such efforts as the Commission determines
appropriate, by rule, to ensure that no investor in a
12-month period has purchased securities offered
pursuant to section 4(6) that, in the aggregate, from
all issuers, exceed the investment limits set forth in
section 4(6)(B);
(9) take such steps to protect the privacy of
information collected from investors as the Commission
shall, by rule, determine appropriate;
(10) not compensate promoters, finders, or lead
generators for providing the broker or funding portal
with the personal identifying information of any
potential investor;
(11) prohibit its directors, officers, or partners
(or any person occupying a similar status or performing
a similar function) from having any financial interest
in an issuer using its services; and
(12) meet such other requirements as the Commission
may, by rule, prescribe, for the protection of
investors and in the public interest.
(b) Requirements for Issuers.--For purposes of section 4(6),
an issuer who offers or sells securities shall--
(1) file with the Commission and provide to investors
and the relevant broker or funding portal, and make
available to potential investors--
(A) the name, legal status, physical address,
and website address of the issuer;
(B) the names of the directors and officers
(and any persons occupying a similar status or
performing a similar function), and each person
holding more than 20 percent of the shares of
the issuer;
(C) a description of the business of the
issuer and the anticipated business plan of the
issuer;
(D) a description of the financial condition
of the issuer, including, for offerings that,
together with all other offerings of the issuer
under section 4(6) within the preceding 12-
month period, have, in the aggregate, target
offering amounts of--
(i) $100,000 or less--
(I) the income tax returns
filed by the issuer for the
most recently completed year
(if any); and
(II) financial statements of
the issuer, which shall be
certified by the principal
executive officer of the issuer
to be true and complete in all
material respects;
(ii) more than $100,000, but not more
than $500,000, financial statements
reviewed by a public accountant who is
independent of the issuer, using
professional standards and procedures
for such review or standards and
procedures established by the
Commission, by rule, for such purpose;
and
(iii) more than $500,000 (or such
other amount as the Commission may
establish, by rule), audited financial
statements;
(E) a description of the stated purpose and
intended use of the proceeds of the offering
sought by the issuer with respect to the target
offering amount;
(F) the target offering amount, the deadline
to reach the target offering amount, and
regular updates regarding the progress of the
issuer in meeting the target offering amount;
(G) the price to the public of the securities
or the method for determining the price,
provided that, prior to sale, each investor
shall be provided in writing the final price
and all required disclosures, with a reasonable
opportunity to rescind the commitment to
purchase the securities;
(H) a description of the ownership and
capital structure of the issuer, including--
(i) terms of the securities of the
issuer being offered and each other
class of security of the issuer,
including how such terms may be
modified, and a summary of the
differences between such securities,
including how the rights of the
securities being offered may be
materially limited, diluted, or
qualified by the rights of any other
class of security of the issuer;
(ii) a description of how the
exercise of the rights held by the
principal shareholders of the issuer
could negatively impact the purchasers
of the securities being offered;
(iii) the name and ownership level of
each existing shareholder who owns more
than 20 percent of any class of the
securities of the issuer;
(iv) how the securities being offered
are being valued, and examples of
methods for how such securities may be
valued by the issuer in the future,
including during subsequent corporate
actions; and
(v) the risks to purchasers of the
securities relating to minority
ownership in the issuer, the risks
associated with corporate actions,
including additional issuances of
shares, a sale of the issuer or of
assets of the issuer, or transactions
with related parties; and
(I) such other information as the Commission
may, by rule, prescribe, for the protection of
investors and in the public interest;
(2) not advertise the terms of the offering, except
for notices which direct investors to the funding
portal or broker;
(3) not compensate or commit to compensate, directly
or indirectly, any person to promote its offerings
through communication channels provided by a broker or
funding portal, without taking such steps as the
Commission shall, by rule, require to ensure that such
person clearly discloses the receipt, past or
prospective, of such compensation, upon each instance
of such promotional communication;
(4) not less than annually, file with the Commission
and provide to investors reports of the results of
operations and financial statements of the issuer, as
the Commission shall, by rule, determine appropriate,
subject to such exceptions and termination dates as the
Commission may establish, by rule; and
(5) comply with such other requirements as the
Commission may, by rule, prescribe, for the protection
of investors and in the public interest.
(c) Liability for Material Misstatements and Omissions.--
(1) Actions authorized.--
(A) In general.--Subject to paragraph (2), a
person who purchases a security in a
transaction exempted by the provisions of
section 4(6) may bring an action against an
issuer described in paragraph (2), either at
law or in equity in any court of competent
jurisdiction, to recover the consideration paid
for such security with interest thereon, less
the amount of any income received thereon, upon
the tender of such security, or for damages if
such person no longer owns the security.
(B) Liability.--An action brought under this
paragraph shall be subject to the provisions of
section 12(b) and section 13, as if the
liability were created under section 12(a)(2).
(2) Applicability.--An issuer shall be liable in an
action under paragraph (1), if the issuer--
(A) by the use of any means or instruments of
transportation or communication in interstate
commerce or of the mails, by any means of any
written or oral communication, in the offering
or sale of a security in a transaction exempted
by the provisions of section 4(6), makes an
untrue statement of a material fact or omits to
state a material fact required to be stated or
necessary in order to make the statements, in
the light of the circumstances under which they
were made, not misleading, provided that the
purchaser did not know of such untruth or
omission; and
(B) does not sustain the burden of proof that
such issuer did not know, and in the exercise
of reasonable care could not have known, of
such untruth or omission.
(3) Definition.--As used in this subsection, the term
``issuer'' includes any person who is a director or
partner of the issuer, and the principal executive
officer or officers, principal financial officer, and
controller or principal accounting officer of the
issuer (and any person occupying a similar status or
performing a similar function) that offers or sells a
security in a transaction exempted by the provisions of
section 4(6), and any person who offers or sells the
security in such offering.
(d) Information Available to States.--The Commission shall
make, or shall cause to be made by the relevant broker or
funding portal, the information described in subsection (b) and
such other information as the Commission, by rule, determines
appropriate, available to the securities commission (or any
agency or office performing like functions) of each State and
territory of the United States and the District of Columbia.
(e) Restrictions on Sales.--Securities issued pursuant to a
transaction described in section 4(6)--
(1) may not be transferred by the purchaser of such
securities during the 1-year period beginning on the
date of purchase, unless such securities are
transferred--
(A) to the issuer of the securities;
(B) to an accredited investor;
(C) as part of an offering registered with
the Commission; or
(D) to a member of the family of the
purchaser or the equivalent, or in connection
with the death or divorce of the purchaser or
other similar circumstance, in the discretion
of the Commission; and
(2) shall be subject to such other limitations as the
Commission shall, by rule, establish.
(f) Applicability.--Section 4(6) shall not apply to
transactions involving the offer or sale of securities by any
issuer that--
(1) is not organized under and subject to the laws of
a State or territory of the United States or the
District of Columbia;
(2) is subject to the requirement to file reports
pursuant to section 13 or section 15(d) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934;
(3) is an investment company, as defined in section 3
of the Investment Company Act of 1940, or is excluded
from the definition of investment company by section
3(b) or section 3(c) of that Act; or
(4) the Commission, by rule or regulation, determines
appropriate.
(g) Rule of Construction.--Nothing in this section or section
4(6) shall be construed as preventing an issuer from raising
capital through methods not described under section 4(6).
(h) Certain Calculations.--
(1) Dollar amounts.--Dollar amounts in section 4(6)
and subsection (b) of this section shall be adjusted by
the Commission not less frequently than once every 5
years, by notice published in the Federal Register to
reflect any change in the Consumer Price Index for All
Urban Consumers published by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics.
(2) Income and net worth.--The income and net worth
of a natural person under section 4(6)(B) shall be
calculated in accordance with any rules of the
Commission under this title regarding the calculation
of the income and net worth, respectively, of an
accredited investor.
* * * * * * *
----------
SECURITIES EXCHANGE ACT OF 1934
TITLE I--REGULATION OF SECURITIES EXCHANGES
* * * * * * *
definitions and application of title
Sec. 3. (a) When used in this title, unless the context
otherwise requires--
(1) The term ``exchange'' means any organization,
association, or group of persons, whether incorporated
or unincorporated, which constitutes, maintains, or
provides a market place or facilities for bringing
together purchasers and sellers of securities or for
otherwise performing with respect to securities the
functions commonly performed by a stock exchange as
that term is generally understood, and includes the
market place and the market facilities maintained by
such exchange.
(2) The term ``facility'' when used with respect to
an exchange includes its premises, tangible or
intangible property whether on the premises or not, any
right to the use of such premises or property or any
service thereof for the purpose of effecting or
reporting a transaction on an exchange (including,
among other things, any system of communication to or
from the exchange, by ticker or otherwise, maintained
by or with the consent of the exchange), and any right
of the exchange to the use of any property or service.
(3)(A) The term ``member'' when used with respect to
a national securities exchange means (i) any natural
person permitted to effect transactions on the floor of
the exchange without the services of another person
acting as broker, (ii) any registered broker or dealer
with which such a natural person is associated, (iii)
any registered broker or dealer permitted to designate
as a representative such a natural person, and (iv) any
other registered broker or dealer which agrees to be
regulated by such exchange and with respect to which
the exchange undertakes to enforce compliance with the
provisions of this title, the rules and regulations
thereunder, and its own rules. For purposes of sections
6(b)(1), 6(b)(4), 6(b)(6), 6(b)(7), 6(d), 17(d), 19(d),
19(e), 19(g), 19(h), and 21 of this title, the term
``member'' when used with respect to a national
securities exchange also means, to the extent of the
rules of the exchange specified by the Commission, any
person required by the Commission to comply with such
rules pursuant to section 6(f) of this title.
(B) The term ``member'' when used with respect to a
registered securities association means any broker or
dealer who agrees to be regulated by such association
and with respect to whom the association undertakes to
enforce compliance with the provisions of this title,
the rules and regulations thereunder, and its own
rules.
(4) Broker.--
(A) In general.--The term ``broker'' means
any person engaged in the business of effecting
transactions in securities for the account of
others.
(B) Exception for certain bank activities.--A
bank shall not be considered to be a broker
because the bank engages in any one or more of
the following activities under the conditions
described:
(i) Third party brokerage
arrangements.--The bank enters into a
contractual or other written
arrangement with a broker or dealer
registered under this title under which
the broker or dealer offers brokerage
services on or off the premises of the
bank if--
(I) such broker or dealer is
clearly identified as the
person performing the brokerage
services;
(II) the broker or dealer
performs brokerage services in
an area that is clearly marked
and, to the extent practicable,
physically separate from the
routine deposit-taking
activities of the bank;
(III) any materials used by
the bank to advertise or
promote generally the
availability of brokerage
services under the arrangement
clearly indicate that the
brokerage services are being
provided by the broker or
dealer and not by the bank;
(IV) any materials used by
the bank to advertise or
promote generally the
availability of brokerage
services under the arrangement
are in compliance with the
Federal securities laws before
distribution;
(V) bank employees (other
than associated persons of a
broker or dealer who are
qualified pursuant to the rules
of a self-regulatory
organization) perform only
clerical or ministerial
functions in connection with
brokerage transactions
including scheduling
appointments with the
associated persons of a broker
or dealer, except that bank
employees may forward customer
funds or securities and may
describe in general terms the
types of investment vehicles
available from the bank and the
broker or dealer under the
arrangement;
(VI) bank employees do not
receive incentive compensation
for any brokerage transaction
unless such employees are
associated persons of a broker
or dealer and are qualified
pursuant to the rules of a
self-regulatory organization,
except that the bank employees
may receive compensation for
the referral of any customer if
the compensation is a nominal
one-time cash fee of a fixed
dollar amount and the payment
of the fee is not contingent on
whether the referral results in
a transaction;
(VII) such services are
provided by the broker or
dealer on a basis in which all
customers that receive any
services are fully disclosed to
the broker or dealer;
(VIII) the bank does not
carry a securities account of
the customer except as
permitted under clause (ii) or
(viii) of this subparagraph;
and
(IX) the bank, broker, or
dealer informs each customer
that the brokerage services are
provided by the broker or
dealer and not by the bank and
that the securities are not
deposits or other obligations
of the bank, are not guaranteed
by the bank, and are not
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation.
(ii) Trust activities.--The bank
effects transactions in a trustee
capacity, or effects transactions in a
fiduciary capacity in its trust
department or other department that is
regularly examined by bank examiners
for compliance with fiduciary
principles and standards, and--
(I) is chiefly compensated
for such transactions,
consistent with fiduciary
principles and standards, on
the basis of an administration
or annual fee (payable on a
monthly, quarterly, or other
basis), a percentage of assets
under management, or a flat or
capped per order processing fee
equal to not more than the cost
incurred by the bank in
connection with executing
securities transactions for
trustee and fiduciary
customers, or any combination
of such fees; and
(II) does not publicly
solicit brokerage business,
other than by advertising that
it effects transactions in
securities in conjunction with
advertising its other trust
activities.
(iii) Permissible securities
transactions.--The bank effects
transactions in--
(I) commercial paper, bankers
acceptances, or commercial
bills;
(II) exempted securities;
(III) qualified Canadian
government obligations as
defined in section 5136 of the
Revised Statutes, in conformity
with section 15C of this title
and the rules and regulations
thereunder, or obligations of
the North American Development
Bank; or
(IV) any standardized, credit
enhanced debt security issued
by a foreign government
pursuant to the March 1989 plan
of then Secretary of the
Treasury Brady, used by such
foreign government to retire
outstanding commercial bank
loans.
(iv) Certain stock purchase plans.--
(I) Employee benefit plans.--
The bank effects transactions,
as part of its transfer agency
activities, in the securities
of an issuer as part of any
pension, retirement, profit-
sharing, bonus, thrift,
savings, incentive, or other
similar benefit plan for the
employees of that issuer or its
affiliates (as defined in
section 2 of the Bank Holding
Company Act of 1956), if the
bank does not solicit
transactions or provide
investment advice with respect
to the purchase or sale of
securities in connection with
the plan.
(II) Dividend reinvestment
plans.--The bank effects
transactions, as part of its
transfer agency activities, in
the securities of an issuer as
part of that issuer's dividend
reinvestment plan, if--
(aa) the bank does
not solicit
transactions or provide
investment advice with
respect to the purchase
or sale of securities
in connection with the
plan; and
(bb) the bank does
not net shareholders'
buy and sell orders,
other than for programs
for odd-lot holders or
plans registered with
the Commission.
(III) Issuer plans.--The bank
effects transactions, as part
of its transfer agency
activities, in the securities
of an issuer as part of a plan
or program for the purchase or
sale of that issuer's shares,
if--
(aa) the bank does
not solicit
transactions or provide
investment advice with
respect to the purchase
or sale of securities
in connection with the
plan or program; and
(bb) the bank does
not net shareholders'
buy and sell orders,
other than for programs
for odd-lot holders or
plans registered with
the Commission.
(IV) Permissible delivery of
materials.--The exception to
being considered a broker for a
bank engaged in activities
described in subclauses (I),
(II), and (III) will not be
affected by delivery of written
or electronic plan materials by
a bank to employees of the
issuer, shareholders of the
issuer, or members of affinity
groups of the issuer, so long
as such materials are--
(aa) comparable in
scope or nature to that
permitted by the
Commission as of the
date of the enactment
of the Gramm-Leach-
Bliley Act; or
(bb) otherwise
permitted by the
Commission.
(v) Sweep accounts.--The bank effects
transactions as part of a program for
the investment or reinvestment of
deposit funds into any no-load, open-
end management investment company
registered under the Investment Company
Act of 1940 that holds itself out as a
money market fund.
(vi) Affiliate transactions.--The
bank effects transactions for the
account of any affiliate of the bank
(as defined in section 2 of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956) other
than--
(I) a registered broker or
dealer; or
(II) an affiliate that is
engaged in merchant banking, as
described in section 4(k)(4)(H)
of the Bank Holding Company Act
of 1956.
(vii) Private securities offerings.--
The bank--
(I) effects sales as part of
a primary offering of
securities not involving a
public offering, pursuant to
section 3(b), 4(2), or 4(5) of
the Securities Act of 1933 or
the rules and regulations
issued thereunder;
(II) at any time after the
date that is 1 year after the
date of the enactment of the
Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act, is not
affiliated with a broker or
dealer that has been registered
for more than 1 year in
accordance with this Act, and
engages in dealing, market
making, or underwriting
activities, other than with
respect to exempted securities;
and
(III) if the bank is not
affiliated with a broker or
dealer, does not effect any
primary offering described in
subclause (I) the aggregate
amount of which exceeds 25
percent of the capital of the
bank, except that the
limitation of this subclause
shall not apply with respect to
any sale of government
securities or municipal
securities.
(viii) Safekeeping and custody
activities.--
(I) In general.--The bank, as
part of customary banking
activities--
(aa) provides
safekeeping or custody
services with respect
to securities,
including the exercise
of warrants and other
rights on behalf of
customers;
(bb) facilitates the
transfer of funds or
securities, as a
custodian or a clearing
agency, in connection
with the clearance and
settlement of its
customers' transactions
in securities;
(cc) effects
securities lending or
borrowing transactions
with or on behalf of
customers as part of
services provided to
customers pursuant to
division (aa) or (bb)
or invests cash
collateral pledged in
connection with such
transactions;
(dd) holds securities
pledged by a customer
to another person or
securities subject to
purchase or resale
agreements involving a
customer, or
facilitates the
pledging or transfer of
such securities by book
entry or as otherwise
provided under
applicable law, if the
bank maintains records
separately identifying
the securities and the
customer; or
(ee) serves as a
custodian or provider
of other related
administrative services
to any individual
retirement account,
pension, retirement,
profit sharing, bonus,
thrift savings,
incentive, or other
similar benefit plan.
(II) Exception for carrying
broker activities.--The
exception to being considered a
broker for a bank engaged in
activities described in
subclause (I) shall not apply
if the bank, in connection with
such activities, acts in the
United States as a carrying
broker (as such term, and
different formulations thereof,
are used in section 15(c)(3) of
this title and the rules and
regulations thereunder) for any
broker or dealer, unless such
carrying broker activities are
engaged in with respect to
government securities (as
defined in paragraph (42) of
this subsection).
(ix) Identified banking products.--
The bank effects transactions in
identified banking products as defined
in section 206 of the Gramm-Leach-
Bliley Act.
(x) Municipal securities.--The bank
effects transactions in municipal
securities.
(xi) De minimis exception.--The bank
effects, other than in transactions
referred to in clauses (i) through (x),
not more than 500 transactions in
securities in any calendar year, and
such transactions are not effected by
an employee of the bank who is also an
employee of a broker or dealer.
(C) Execution by broker or dealer.--The
exception to being considered a broker for a
bank engaged in activities described in clauses
(ii), (iv), and (viii) of subparagraph (B)
shall not apply if the activities described in
such provisions result in the trade in the
United States of any security that is a
publicly traded security in the United States,
unless--
(i) the bank directs such trade to a
registered broker or dealer for
execution;
(ii) the trade is a cross trade or
other substantially similar trade of a
security that--
(I) is made by the bank or
between the bank and an
affiliated fiduciary; and
(II) is not in contravention
of fiduciary principles
established under applicable
Federal or State law; or
(iii) the trade is conducted in some
other manner permitted under rules,
regulations, or orders as the
Commission may prescribe or issue.
(D) Fiduciary capacity.--For purposes of
subparagraph (B)(ii), the term ``fiduciary
capacity'' means--
(i) in the capacity as trustee,
executor, administrator, registrar of
stocks and bonds, transfer agent,
guardian, assignee, receiver, or
custodian under a uniform gift to minor
act, or as an investment adviser if the
bank receives a fee for its investment
advice;
(ii) in any capacity in which the
bank possesses investment discretion on
behalf of another; or
(iii) in any other similar capacity.
(E) Exception for entities subject to section
15(e).--The term ``broker'' does not include a
bank that--
(i) was, on the day before the date
of enactment of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley
Act, subject to section 15(e); and
(ii) is subject to such restrictions
and requirements as the Commission
considers appropriate.
(F) Joint rulemaking required.--The
Commission and the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System shall jointly adopt a
single set of rules or regulations to implement
the exceptions in subparagraph (B).
(5) Dealer.--
(A) In general.--The term ``dealer'' means
any person engaged in the business of buying
and selling securities (not including security-
based swaps, other than security-based swaps
with or for persons that are not eligible
contract participants) for such person's own
account through a broker or otherwise.
(B) Exception for person not engaged in the
business of dealing.--The term ``dealer'' does
not include a person that buys or sells
securities (not including security-based swaps,
other than security-based swaps with or for
persons that are not eligible contract
participants) for such person's own account,
either individually or in a fiduciary capacity,
but not as a part of a regular business.
(C) Exception for certain bank activities.--A
bank shall not be considered to be a dealer
because the bank engages in any of the
following activities under the conditions
described:
(i) Permissible securities
transactions.--The bank buys or sells--
(I) commercial paper, bankers
acceptances, or commercial
bills;
(II) exempted securities;
(III) qualified Canadian
government obligations as
defined in section 5136 of the
Revised Statutes of the United
States, in conformity with
section 15C of this title and
the rules and regulations
thereunder, or obligations of
the North American Development
Bank; or
(IV) any standardized, credit
enhanced debt security issued
by a foreign government
pursuant to the March 1989 plan
of then Secretary of the
Treasury Brady, used by such
foreign government to retire
outstanding commercial bank
loans.
(ii) Investment, trustee, and
fiduciary transactions.--The bank buys
or sells securities for investment
purposes--
(I) for the bank; or
(II) for accounts for which
the bank acts as a trustee or
fiduciary.
(iii) Asset-backed transactions.--The
bank engages in the issuance or sale to
qualified investors, through a grantor
trust or other separate entity, of
securities backed by or representing an
interest in notes, drafts, acceptances,
loans, leases, receivables, other
obligations (other than securities of
which the bank is not the issuer), or
pools of any such obligations
predominantly originated by--
(I) the bank;
(II) an affiliate of any such
bank other than a broker or
dealer; or
(III) a syndicate of banks of
which the bank is a member, if
the obligations or pool of
obligations consists of
mortgage obligations or
consumer-related receivables.
(iv) Identified banking products.--
The bank buys or sells identified
banking products, as defined in section
206 of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act.
(6) The term ``bank'' means (A) a banking institution
organized under the laws of the United States or a
Federal savings association, as defined in section 2(5)
of the Home Owners' Loan Act, (B) a member bank of the
Federal Reserve System, (C) any other banking
institution or savings association, as defined in
section 2(4) of the Home Owners' Loan Act, whether
incorporated or not, doing business under the laws of
any State or of the United States, a substantial
portion of the business of which consists of receiving
deposits or exercising fiduciary powers similar to
those permitted to national banks under the authority
of the Comptroller of the Currency pursuant to the
first section of Public Law 87-722 (12 U.S.C. 92a), and
which is supervised and examined by State or Federal
authority having supervision over banks or savings
associations, and which is not operated for the purpose
of evading the provisions of this title, and (D) a
receiver, conservator, or other liquidating agent of
any institution or firm included in clauses (A), (B),
or (C) of this paragraph.
(7) The term ``director'' means any director of a
corporation or any person performing similar functions
with respect to any organization, whether incorporated
or unincorporated.
(8) The term ``issuer'' means any person who issues
or proposes to issue any security; except that with
respect to certificates of deposit for securities,
voting-trust certificates, or collateral-trust
certificates, or with respect to certificates of
interest or shares in an unincorporated investment
trust not having a board of directors or of the fixed,
restricted management, or unit type, the term
``issuer'' means the person or persons performing the
acts and assuming the duties of depositor or manager
pursuant to the provisions of the trust or other
agreement or instrument under which such securities are
issued; and except that with respect to equipment-trust
certificates or like securities, the term ``issuer''
means the person by whom the equipment or property is,
or is to be, used.
(9) The term ``person'' means a natural person,
company, government, or political subdivision, agency,
or instrumentality of a government.
(10) The term ``security'' means any note, stock,
treasury stock, security future, security-based
swap,bond, debenture, certificate of interest or
participation in any profit-sharing agreement or in any
oil, gas, or other mineral royalty or lease, any
collateral-trust certificate, preorganization
certificate or subscription, transferable share,
investment contract, voting-trust certificate,
certificate of deposit for a security, any put, call,
straddle, option, or privilege on any security,
certificate of deposit, or group or index of securities
(including any interest therein or based on the value
thereof), or any put, call, straddle, option, or
privilege entered into on a national securities
exchange relating to foreign currency, or in general,
any instrument commonly known as a ``security''; or any
certificate of interest or participation in, temporary
or interim certificate for, receipt for, or warrant or
right to subscribe to or purchase, any of the
foregoing; but shall not include currency or any note,
draft, bill of exchange, or banker's acceptance which
has a maturity at the time of issuance of not exceeding
nine months, exclusive of days of grace, or any renewal
thereof the maturity of which is likewise limited.
(11) The term ``equity security'' means any stock or
similar security; or any security future on any such
security; or any security convertible, with or without
consideration, into such a security, or carrying any
warrant or right to subscribe to or purchase such a
security; or any such warrant or right; or any other
security which the Commission shall deem to be of
similar nature and consider necessary or appropriate,
by such rules and regulations as it may prescribe in
the public interest or for the protection of investors,
to treat as an equity security.
(12)(A) The term ``exempted security'' or ``exempted
securities'' includes--
(i) government securities, as defined in
paragraph (42) of this subsection;
(ii) municipal securities, as defined in
paragraph (29) of this subsection;
(iii) any interest or participation in any
common trust fund or similar fund that is
excluded from the definition of the term
``investment company'' under section 3(c)(3) of
the Investment Company Act of 1940;
(iv) any interest or participation in a
single trust fund, or a collective trust fund
maintained by a bank, or any security arising
out of a contract issued by an insurance
company, which interest, participation, or
security is issued in connection with a
qualified plan as defined in subparagraph (C)
of this paragraph;
(v) any security issued by or any interest or
participation in any pooled income fund,
collective trust fund, collective investment
fund, or similar fund that is excluded from the
definition of an investment company under
section 3(c)(10)(B) of the Investment Company
Act of 1940;
(vi) solely for purposes of sections 12, 13,
14, and 16 of this title, any security issued
by or any interest or participation in any
church plan, company, or account that is
excluded from the definition of an investment
company under section 3(c)(14) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940; and
(vii) such other securities (which may
include, among others, unregistered securities,
the market in which is predominantly
intrastate) as the Commission may, by such
rules and regulations as it deems consistent
with the public interest and the protection of
investors, either unconditionally or upon
specified terms and conditions or for stated
periods, exempt from the operation of any one
or more provisions of this title which by their
terms do not apply to an ``exempted security''
or to ``exempted securities''.
(B)(i) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A)(i) of this
paragraph, government securities shall not be deemed to
be ``exempted securities'' for the purposes of section
17A of this title.
(ii) Notwithstanding subparagraph (A)(ii) of this
paragraph, municipal securities shall not be deemed to
be ``exempted securities'' for the purposes of sections
15 and 17A of this title.
(C) For purposes of subparagraph (A)(iv) of this
paragraph, the term ``qualified plan'' means (i) a
stock bonus, pension, or profit-sharing plan which
meets the requirements for qualification under section
401 of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954, (ii) an
annuity plan which meets the requirements for the
deduction of the employer's contribution under section
404(a)(2) of such Code, (iii) a governmental plan as
defined in section 414(d) of such Code which has been
established by an employer for the exclusive benefit of
its employees or their beneficiaries for the purpose of
distributing to such employees or their beneficiaries
the corpus and income of the funds accumulated under
such plan, if under such plan it is impossible, prior
to the satisfaction of all liabilities with respect to
such employees and their beneficiaries, for any part of
the corpus or income to be used for, or diverted to,
purposes other than the exclusive benefit of such
employees or their beneficiaries, or (iv) a church
plan, company, or account that is excluded from the
definition of an investment company under section
3(c)(14) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, other
than any plan described in clause (i), (ii), or (iii)
of this subparagraph which (I) covers employees some or
all of whom are employees within the meaning of section
401(c) of such Code, or (II) is a plan funded by an
annuity contract described in section 403(b) of such
Code.
(13) The terms ``buy'' and ``purchase'' each include
any contract to buy, purchase, or otherwise acquire.
For security futures products, such term includes any
contract, agreement, or transaction for future
delivery. For security-based swaps, such terms include
the execution, termination (prior to its scheduled
maturity date), assignment, exchange, or similar
transfer or conveyance of, or extinguishing of rights
or obligations under, a security-based swap, as the
context may require.
(14) The terms ``sale'' and ``sell'' each include any
contract to sell or otherwise dispose of. For security
futures products, such term includes any contract,
agreement, or transaction for future delivery. For
security-based swaps, such terms include the execution,
termination (prior to its scheduled maturity date),
assignment, exchange, or similar transfer or conveyance
of, or extinguishing of rights or obligations under, a
security-based swap, as the context may require.
(15) The term ``Commission'' means the Securities and
Exchange Commission established by section 4 of this
title.
(16) The term ``State'' means any State of the United
States, the District of Columbia, Puerto Rico,
Philippine Islands, the Virgin Islands, or any other
possession of the United States.
(17) The term ``interstate commerce'' means trade,
commerce, transportation, or communication among the
several States, or between any foreign country and any
State, or between any State and any place or ship
outside thereof. The term also includes intrastate use
of (A) any facility of a national securities exchange
or of a telephone or other interstate means of
communication, or (B) any other interstate
instrumentality.
(18) The term ``person associated with a broker or
dealer'' or ``associated person of a broker or dealer''
means any partner, officer, director, or branch manager
of such broker or dealer (or any person occupying a
similar status or performing similar functions), any
person directly or indirectly controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with such broker or dealer,
or any employee of such broker or dealer, except that
any person associated with a broker or dealer whose
functions are solely clerical or ministerial shall not
be included in the meaning of such term for purposes of
section 15(b) of this title (other than paragraph (6)
thereof).
(19) The terms ``investment company,''``affiliated
person,''``insurance company,''``separate account,''
and ``company'' have the same meanings as in the
Investment Company Act of 1940.
(20) The terms ``investment adviser'' and
``underwriter'' have the same meanings as in the
Investment Advisers Act of 1940.
(21) The term ``persons associated with a member'' or
``associated person of a member'' when used with
respect to a member of a national securities exchange
or registered securities association means any partner,
officer, director, or branch manager of such member (or
any person occupying a similar status or performing
similar functions), any person directly or indirectly
controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with such member, or any employee of such member.
(22)(A) The term ``securities information processor''
means any person engaged in the business of (i)
collecting, processing, or preparing for distribution
or publication, or assisting, participating in, or
coordinating the distribution or publication of,
information with respect to transactions in or
quotations for any security (other than an exempted
security) or (ii) distributing or publishing (whether
by means of a ticker tape, a communications network, a
terminal display device, or otherwise) on a current and
continuing basis, information with respect to such
transactions or quotations. The term ``securities
information processor'' does not include any bona fide
newspaper, news magazine, or business or financial
publication of general and regular circulation, any
self-regulatory organization, any bank, broker, dealer,
building and loan, savings and loan, or homestead
association, or cooperative bank, if such bank, broker,
dealer, association, or cooperative bank would be
deemed to be a securities information processor solely
by reason of functions performed by such institutions
as part of customary banking, brokerage, dealing,
association, or cooperative bank activities, or any
common carrier, as defined in section 3 of the
Communications Act of 1934, subject to the jurisdiction
of the Federal Communications Commission or a State
commission, as defined in section 3 of that Act, unless
the Commission determines that such carrier is engaged
in the business of collecting, processing, or preparing
for distribution or publication, information with
respect to transactions in or quotations for any
security.
(B) The term ``exclusive processor'' means any
securities information processor or self-regulatory
organization which, directly or indirectly, engages on
an exclusive basis on behalf of any national securities
exchange or registered securities association, or any
national securities exchange or registered securities
association which engages on an exclusive basis on its
own behalf, in collecting, processing, or preparing for
distribution or publication any information with
respect to (i) transactions or quotations on or
effected or made by means of any facility of such
exchange or (ii) quotations distributed or published by
means of any electronic system operated or controlled
by such association.
(23)(A) The term ``clearing agency'' means any person
who acts as an intermediary in making payments or
deliveries or both in connection with transactions in
securities or who provides facilities for comparison of
data respecting the terms of settlement of securities
transactions, to reduce the number of settlements of
securities transactions, or for the allocation of
securities settlement responsibilities. Such term also
means any person, such as a securities depository, who
(i) acts as a custodian of securities in connection
with a system for the central handling of securities
whereby all securities of a particular class or series
of any issuer deposited within the system are treated
as fungible and may be transferred, loaned, or pledged
by bookkeeping entry without physical delivery of
securities certificates, or (ii) otherwise permits or
facilitates the settlement of securities transactions
or the hypothecation or lending of securities without
physical delivery of securities certificates.
(B) The term ``clearing agency'' does not include (i)
any Federal Reserve bank, Federal home loan bank, or
Federal land bank; (ii) any national securities
exchange or registered securities association solely by
reason of its providing facilities for comparison of
data respecting the terms of settlement of securities
transactions effected on such exchange or by means of
any electronic system operated or controlled by such
association; (iii) any bank, broker, dealer, building
and loan, savings and loan, or homestead association,
or cooperative bank if such bank, broker, dealer,
association, or cooperative bank would be deemed to be
a clearing agency solely by reason of functions
performed by such institution as part of customary
banking, brokerage, dealing, association, or
cooperative banking activities, or solely by reason of
acting on behalf of a clearing agency or a participant
therein in connection with the furnishing by the
clearing agency of services to its participants or the
use of services of the clearing agency by its
participants, unless the Commission, by rule, otherwise
provides as necessary or appropriate to assure the
prompt and accurate clearance and settlement of
securities transactions or to prevent evasion of this
title; (iv) any life insurance company, its registered
separate accounts, or a subsidiary of such insurance
company solely by reason of functions commonly
performed by such entities in connection with variable
annuity contracts or variable life policies issued by
such insurance company or its separate accounts; (v)
any registered open-end investment company or unit
investment trust solely by reason of functions commonly
performed by it in connection with shares in such
registered open-end investment company or unit
investment trust, or (vi) any person solely by reason
of its performing functions described in paragraph
25(E) of this subsection.
(24) The term ``participant'' when used with respect
to a clearing agency means any person who uses a
clearing agency to clear or settle securities
transactions or to transfer, pledge, lend, or
hypothecate securities. Such term does not include a
person whose only use of a clearing agency is (A)
through another person who is a participant or (B) as a
pledgee of securities.
(25) The term ``transfer agent'' means any person who
engages on behalf of an issuer of securities or on
behalf of itself as an issuer of securities in (A)
countersigning such securities upon issuance; (B)
monitoring the issuance of such securities with a view
to preventing unauthorized issuance, a function
commonly performed by a person called a registrar; (C)
registering the transfer of such securities; (D)
exchanging or converting such securities; or (E)
transferring record ownership of securities by
bookkeeping entry without physical issuance of
securities certificates. The term ``transfer agent''
does not include any insurance company or separate
account which performs such functions solely with
respect to variable annuity contracts or variable life
policies which it issues or any registered clearing
agency which performs such functions solely with
respect to options contracts which it issues.
(26) The term ``self-regulatory organization'' means
any national securities exchange, registered securities
association, or registered clearing agency, or (solely
for purposes of sections 19(b), 19(c), and 23(b) of
this title) the Municipal Securities Rulemaking Board
established by section 15B of this title.
(27) The term ``rules of an exchange'', ``rules of an
association'', or ``rules of a clearing agency'' means
the constitution, articles of incorporation, bylaws,
and rules, or instruments corresponding to the
foregoing, of an exchange, association of brokers and
dealers, or clearing agency, respectively, and such of
the stated policies, practices, and interpretations of
such exchange, association, or clearing agency as the
Commission, by rule, may determine to be necessary or
appropriate in the public interest or for the
protection of investors to be deemed to be rules of
such exchange, association, or clearing agency.
(28) The term ``rules of a self-regulatory
organization'' means the rules of an exchange which is
a national securities exchange, the rules of an
association of brokers and dealers which is a
registered securities association, the rules of a
clearing agency which is a registered clearing agency,
or the rules of the Municipal Securities Rulemaking
Board.
(29) The term ``municipal securities'' means
securities which are direct obligations of, or
obligations guaranteed as to principal or interest by,
a State or any political subdivision thereof, or any
agency or instrumentality of a State or any political
subdivision thereof, or any municipal corporate
instrumentality of one or more States, or any security
which is an industrial development bond (as defined in
section 103(c)(2) of the Internal Revenue Code of 1954)
the interest on which is excludable from gross income
under section 103(a)(1) of such Code if, by reason of
the application of paragraph (4) or (6) of section
103(c) of such Code (determined as if paragraphs
(4)(A), (5), and (7) were not included in such section
103(c)), paragraph (1) of such section 103(c) does not
apply to such security.
(30) The term ``municipal securities dealer'' means
any person (including a separately identifiable
department or division of a bank) engaged in the
business of buying and selling municipal securities for
his own account, through a broker or otherwise, but
does not include--
(A) any person insofar as he buys or sells
such securities for his own account, either
individually or in some fiduciary capacity, but
not as a part of a regular business; or
(B) a bank, unless the bank is engaged in the
business of buying and selling municipal
securities for its own account other than in a
fiduciary capacity, through a broker or
otherwise; Provided, however, That if the bank
is engaged in such business through a
separately identifiable department or division
(as defined by the Municipal Securities
Rulemaking Board in accordance with section
15B(b)(2)(H) of this title), the department or
division and not the bank itself shall be
deemed to be the municipal securities dealer.
(31) The term ``municipal securities broker'' means a
broker engaged in the business of effecting
transactions in municipal securities for the account of
others.
(32) The term ``person associated with a municipal
securities dealer'' when used with respect to a
municipal securities dealer which is a bank or a
division or department of a bank means any person
directly engaged in the management, direction,
supervision, or performance of any of the municipal
securities dealer's activities with respect to
municipal securities, and any person directly or
indirectly controlling such activities or controlled by
the municipal securities dealer in connection with such
activities.
(33) The term ``municipal securities investment
portfolio'' means all municipal securities held for
investment and not for sale as part of a regular
business by a municipal securities dealer or by a
person, directly or indirectly, controlling, controlled
by, or under common control with a municipal securities
dealer.
(34) The term ``appropriate regulatory agency''
means--
(A) When used with respect to a municipal
securities dealer:
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank, a
subsidiary or a department or division
of any such bank, a Federal savings
association (as defined in section
3(b)(2) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(2))),
the deposits of which are insured by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, or a subsidiary or
department or division of any such
Federal savings association;
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, in the case of
a State member bank of the Federal
Reserve System, a subsidiary or a
department or division thereof, a bank
holding company, a subsidiary of a bank
holding company which is a bank other
than a bank specified in clause (i),
(iii), or (iv) of this subparagraph, a
subsidiary or a department or division
of such subsidiary, or a savings and
loan holding company;
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of a bank
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (other than a
member of the Federal Reserve System),
a subsidiary or department or division
of any such bank, a State savings
association (as defined in section
3(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(3))),
the deposits of which are insured by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, or a subsidiary or a
department or division of any such
State savings association; and
(iv) the Commission in the case of
all other municipal securities dealers.
(B) When used with respect to a clearing
agency or transfer agent:
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank, a
subsidiary of any such bank, a Federal
savings association (as defined in
section 3(b)(2) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(2))),
the deposits of which are insured by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, or a subsidiary of any
such Federal savings association;
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, in the case of
a State member bank of the Federal
Reserve System, a subsidiary thereof, a
bank holding company, a subsidiary of a
bank holding company that is a bank
other than a bank specified in clause
(i) or (iii) of this subparagraph, or a
savings and loan holding company;
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of a bank
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (other than a
member of the Federal Reserve System),
a subsidiary of any such bank, a State
savings association (as defined in
section 3(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(3))),
the deposits of which are insured by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, or a subsidiary of any
such State savings association; and
(iv) the Commission in the case of
all other clearing agencies and
transfer agents.
(C) When used with respect to a participant
or applicant to become a participant in a
clearing agency or a person requesting or
having access to services offered by a clearing
agency:
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank or a
Federal savings association (as defined
in section 3(b)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(b)(2))), the deposits of which are
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation when the
appropriate regulatory agency for such
clearing agency is not the Commission;
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System in the case of a
State member bank of the Federal
Reserve System, a bank holding company,
or a subsidiary of a bank holding
company, a subsidiary of a bank holding
company that is a bank other than a
bank specified in clause (i) or (iii)
of this subparagraph, or a savings and
loan holding company when the
appropriate regulatory agency for such
clearing agency is not the Commission;
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of a bank
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (other than a
member of the Federal Reserve System)
or a State savings association (as
defined in section 3(b)(3) of the
Federal Deposit Insurance Act (12
U.S.C. 1813(b)(3))), the deposits of
which are insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation; and when
the appropriate regulatory agency for
such clearing agency is not the
Commission;
(iv) the Commission in all other
cases.
(D) When used with respect to an
institutional investment manager which is a
bank the deposits of which are insured in
accordance with the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act:
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank or a
Federal savings association (as defined
in section 3(b)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(b)(2))), the deposits of which are
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, in the case of
any other member bank of the Federal
Reserve System; and
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of any other
insured bank or a State savings
association (as defined in section
3(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(3))),
the deposits of which are insured by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation.
(E) When used with respect to a national
securities exchange or registered securities
association, member thereof, person associated
with a member thereof, applicant to become a
member thereof or to become associated with a
member thereof, or person requesting or having
access to services offered by such exchange or
association or member thereof, or the Municipal
Securities Rulemaking Board, the Commission.
(F) When used with respect to a person
exercising investment discretion with respect
to an account:
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank or a
Federal savings association (as defined
in section 3(b)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act (12 U.S.C.
1813(b)(2))), the deposits of which are
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation;
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System in the case of
any other member bank of the Federal
Reserve System;
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of any other
bank the deposits of which are insured
in accordance with the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act or a State savings
association (as defined in section
3(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(b)(3))),
the deposits of which are insured by
the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation; and
(iv) the Commission in the case of
all other such persons.
(G) When used with respect to a government
securities broker or government securities
dealer, or person associated with a government
securities broker or government securities
dealer:
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank, a
Federal savings association (as defined
in section 3(b)(2) of the Federal
Deposit Insurance Act), the deposits of
which are insured by the Federal
Deposit Insurance Corporation, or a
Federal branch or Federal agency of a
foreign bank (as such terms are used in
the International Banking Act of 1978);
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, in the case of
a State member bank of the Federal
Reserve System, a foreign bank, an
uninsured State branch or State agency
of a foreign bank, a commercial lending
company owned or controlled by a
foreign bank (as such terms are used in
the International Banking Act of 1978),
or a corporation organized or having an
agreement with the Board of Governors
of the Federal Reserve System pursuant
to section 25 or section 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act;
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of a bank
insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation (other than a
member of the Federal Reserve System or
a Federal savings bank), a State
savings association (as defined in
section 3(b)(3) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act), the deposits of which
are insured by the Federal Deposit
Insurance Corporation, or an insured
State branch of a foreign bank (as such
terms are used in the International
Banking Act of 1978); and
(iv) the Commission, in the case of
all other government securities brokers
and government securities dealers.
(H) When used with respect to an institution
described in subparagraph (D), (F), or (G) of
section 2(c)(2), or held under section 4(f), of
the Bank Holding Company Act of 1956--
(i) the Comptroller of the Currency,
in the case of a national bank;
(ii) the Board of Governors of the
Federal Reserve System, in the case of
a State member bank of the Federal
Reserve System or any corporation
chartered under section 25A of the
Federal Reserve Act;
(iii) the Federal Deposit Insurance
Corporation, in the case of any other
bank the deposits of which are insured
in accordance with the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act; or
(iv) the Commission in the case of
all other such institutions.
As used in this paragraph, the terms ``bank holding
company'' and ``subsidiary of a bank holding company''
have the meanings given them in section 2 of the Bank
Holding Company Act of 1956. As used in this paragraph,
the term ``savings and loan holding company'' has the
same meaning as in section 10(a) of the Home Owners'
Loan Act (12 U.S.C. 1467a(a)).
(35) A person exercises ``investment discretion''
with respect to an account if, directly or indirectly,
such person (A) is authorized to determine what
securities or other property shall be purchased or sold
by or for the account, (B) makes decisions as to what
securities or other property shall be purchased or sold
by or for the account even though some other person may
have responsibility for such investment decisions, or
(C) otherwise exercises such influence with respect to
the purchase and sale of securities or other property
by or for the account as the Commission, by rule,
determines, in the public interest or for the
protection of investors, should be subject to the
operation of the provisions of this title and rules and
regulations thereunder.
(36) A class of persons or markets is subject to
``equal regulation'' if no member of the class has a
competitive advantage over any other member thereof
resulting from a disparity in their regulation under
this title which the Commission determines is unfair
and not necessary or appropriate in furtherance of the
purposes of this title.
(37) The term ``records'' means accounts,
correspondence, memorandums, tapes, discs, papers,
books, and other documents or transcribed information
of any type, whether expressed in ordinary or machine
language.
(38) The term ``market maker'' means any specialist
permitted to act as a dealer, any dealer acting in the
capacity of block positioner, and any dealer who, with
respect to a security, holds himself out (by entering
quotations in an inter-dealer communications system or
otherwise) as being willing to buy and sell such
security for his own account on a regular or continuous
basis.
(39) A person is subject to a ``statutory
disqualification'' with respect to membership or
participation in, or association with a member of, a
self-regulatory organization, if such person--
(A) has been and is expelled or suspended
from membership or participation in, or barred
or suspended from being associated with a
member of, any self-regulatory organization,
foreign equivalent of a self-regulatory
organization, foreign or international
securities exchange, contract market designated
pursuant to section 5 of the Commodity Exchange
Act (7 U.S.C. 7), or any substantially
equivalent foreign statute or regulation, or
futures association registered under section 17
of such Act (7 U.S.C. 21), or any substantially
equivalent foreign statute or regulation, or
has been and is denied trading privileges on
any such contract market or foreign equivalent;
(B) is subject to--
(i) an order of the Commission, other
appropriate regulatory agency, or foreign
financial regulatory authority--
(I) denying, suspending for a period
not exceeding 12 months, or revoking
his registration as a broker, dealer,
municipal securities dealer, government
securities broker, government
securities dealer, security-based swap
dealer, or major security-based swap
participant or limiting his activities
as a foreign person performing a
function substantially equivalent to
any of the above; or
(II) barring or suspending for a
period not exceeding 12 months his
being associated with a broker, dealer,
municipal securities dealer, government
securities broker, government
securities dealer, security-based swap
dealer, major security-based swap
participant, or foreign person
performing a function substantially
equivalent to any of the above;
(ii) an order of the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission denying, suspending, or
revoking his registration under the Commodity
Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1 et seq.); or
(iii) an order by a foreign financial
regulatory authority denying, suspending, or
revoking the person's authority to engage in
transactions in contracts of sale of a
commodity for future delivery or other
instruments traded on or subject to the rules
of a contract market, board of trade, or
foreign equivalent thereof;
(C) by his conduct while associated with a
broker, dealer, municipal securities dealer,
government securities broker, government
securities dealer, security-based swap dealer,
or major security-based swap participant, or
while associated with an entity or person
required to be registered under the Commodity
Exchange Act, has been found to be a cause of
any effective suspension, expulsion, or order
of the character described in subparagraph (A)
or (B) of this paragraph, and in entering such
a suspension, expulsion, or order, the
Commission, an appropriate regulatory agency,
or any such self-regulatory organization shall
have jurisdiction to find whether or not any
person was a cause thereof;
(D) by his conduct while associated with any
broker, dealer, municipal securities dealer,
government securities broker, government
securities dealer, security-based swap dealer,
major security-based swap participant, or any
other entity engaged in transactions in
securities, or while associated with an entity
engaged in transactions in contracts of sale of
a commodity for future delivery or other
instruments traded on or subject to the rules
of a contract market, board of trade, or
foreign equivalent thereof, has been found to
be a cause of any effective suspension,
expulsion, or order by a foreign or
international securities exchange or foreign
financial regulatory authority empowered by a
foreign government to administer or enforce its
laws relating to financial transactions as
described in subparagraph (A) or (B) of this
paragraph;
(E) has associated with him any person who is
known, or in the exercise of reasonable care
should be known, to him to be a person
described by subparagraph (A), (B), (C), or (D)
of this paragraph; or
(F) has committed or omitted any act, or is
subject to an order or finding, enumerated in
subparagraph (D), (E), (H), or (G) of paragraph
(4) of section 15(b) of this title, has been
convicted of any offense specified in
subparagraph (B) of such paragraph (4) or any
other felony within ten years of the date of
the filing of an application for membership or
participation in, or to become associated with
a member of, such self-regulatory organization,
is enjoined from any action, conduct, or
practice specified in subparagraph (C) of such
paragraph (4), has willfully made or caused to
be made in any application for membership or
participation in, or to become associated with
a member of, a self-regulatory organization,
report required to be filed with a self-
regulatory organization, or proceeding before a
self-regulatory organization, any statement
which was at the time, and in the light of the
circumstances under which it was made, false or
misleading with respect to any material fact,
or has omitted to state in any such
application, report, or proceeding any material
fact which is required to be stated therein.
(40) The term ``financial responsibility rules''
means the rules and regulations of the Commission or
the rules and regulations prescribed by any self-
regulatory organization relating to financial
responsibility and related practices which are
designated by the Commission, by rule or regulation, to
be financial responsibility rules.
(41) The term ``mortgage related security'' means a
security that meets standards of credit-worthiness as
established by the Commission, and either:
(A) represents ownership of one or more
promissory notes or certificates of interest or
participation in such notes (including any
rights designed to assure servicing of, or the
receipt or timeliness of receipt by the holders
of such notes, certificates, or participations
of amounts payable under, such notes,
certificates, or participations), which notes:
(i) are directly secured by a first
lien on a single parcel of real estate,
including stock allocated to a dwelling
unit in a residential cooperative
housing corporation, upon which is
located a dwelling or mixed residential
and commercial structure, on a
residential manufactured home as
defined in section 603(6) of the
National Manufactured Housing
Construction and Safety Standards Act
of 1974, whether such manufactured home
is considered real or personal property
under the laws of the State in which it
is to be located, or on one or more
parcels of real estate upon which is
located one or more commercial
structures; and
(ii) were originated by a savings and
loan association, savings bank,
commercial bank, credit union,
insurance company, or similar
institution which is supervised and
examined by a Federal or State
authority, or by a mortgage approved by
the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development pursuant to sections 203
and 211 of the National Housing Act,
or, where such notes involve a lien on
the manufactured home, by any such
institution or by any financial
institution approved for insurance by
the Secretary of Housing and Urban
Development pursuant to section 2 of
the National Housing Act; or
(B) is secured by one or more promissory
notes or certificates of interest or
participations in such notes (with or without
recourse to the issuer thereof) and, by its
terms, provides for payments of principal in
relation to payments, or reasonable projections
of payments, on notes meeting the requirements
of subparagraphs (A) (i) and (ii) or
certificates of interest or participations in
promissory notes meeting such requirements.
For the purpose of this paragraph, the term
``promissory note'', when used in connection with a
manufactured home, shall also include a loan, advance,
or credit sale as evidence by a retail installment
sales contract or other instrument.
(42) The term ``government securities'' means--
(A) securities which are direct obligations
of, or obligations guaranteed as to principal
or interest by, the United States;
(B) securities which are issued or guaranteed
by the Tennessee Valley Authority or by
corporations in which the United States has a
direct or indirect interest and which are
designated by the Secretary of the Treasury for
exemption as necessary or appropriate in the
public interest or for the protection of
investors;
(C) securities issued or guaranteed as to
principal or interest by any corporation the
securities of which are designated, by statute
specifically naming such corporation, to
constitute exempt securities within the meaning
of the laws administered by the Commission;
(D) for purposes of sections 15C and 17A, any
put, call, straddle, option, or privilege on a
security described in subparagraph (A), (B), or
(C) other than a put, call, straddle, option,
or privilege--
(i) that is traded on one or more
national securities exchanges; or
(ii) for which quotations are
disseminated through an automated
quotation system operated by a
registered securities association; or
(E) for purposes of sections 15, 15C, and 17A
as applied to a bank, a qualified Canadian
government obligation as defined in section
5136 of the Revised Statutes of the United
States.
(43) The term ``government securities broker'' means
any person regularly engaged in the business of
effecting transactions in government securities for the
account of others, but does not include--
(A) any corporation the securities of which
are government securities under subparagraph
(B) or (C) of paragraph (42) of this
subsection; or
(B) any person registered with the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, any contract market
designated by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, such contract market's affiliated
clearing organization, or any floor trader on
such contract market, solely because such
person effects transactions in government
securities that the Commission, after
consultation with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, has determined by rule or order to
be incidental to such person's futures-related
business.
(44) The term ``government securities dealer'' means
any person engaged in the business of buying and
selling government securities for his own account,
through a broker or otherwise, but does not include--
(A) any person insofar as he buys or sells
such securities for his own account, either
individually or in some fiduciary capacity, but
not as a part of a regular business;
(B) any corporation the securities of which
are government securities under subparagraph
(B) or (C) of paragraph (42) of this
subsection;
(C) any bank, unless the bank is engaged in
the business of buying and selling government
securities for its own account other than in a
fiduciary capacity, through a broker or
otherwise; or
(D) any person registered with the Commodity
Futures Trading Commission, any contract market
designated by the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, such contract market's affiliated
clearing organization, or any floor trader on
such contract market, solely because such
person effects transactions in government
securities that the Commission, after
consultation with the Commodity Futures Trading
Commission, has determined by rule or order to
be incidental to such person's futures-related
business.
(45) The term ``person associated with a government
securities broker or government securities dealer''
means any partner, officer, director, or branch manager
of such government securities broker or government
securities dealer (or any person occupying a similar
status or performing similar functions), and any other
employee of such government securities broker or
government securities dealer who is engaged in the
management, direction, supervision, or performance of
any activities relating to government securities, and
any person directly or indirectly controlling,
controlled by, or under common control with such
government securities broker or government securities
dealer.
(46) The term ``financial institution'' means--
(A) a bank (as defined in paragraph (6) of
this subsection);
(B) a foreign bank (as such term is used in
the International Banking Act of 1978); and
(C) a savings association (as defined in
section 3(b) of the Federal Deposit Insurance
Act) the deposits of which are insured by the
Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation.
(47) The term ``securities laws'' means the
Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77a et seq.), the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 (15 U.S.C. 78a et
seq.), the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002, the Trust
Indenture Act of 1939 (15 U.S.C. 77aaa et seq.), the
Investment Company Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C. 80a-1 et
seq.), the Investment Advisers Act of 1940 (15 U.S.C.
80b et seq.), and the Securities Investor Protection
Act of 1970 (15 U.S.C. 78aaa et seq.).
(48) The term ``registered broker or dealer'' means a
broker or dealer registered or required to register
pursuant to section 15 or 15B of this title, except
that in paragraph (3) of this subsection and sections 6
and 15A the term means such a broker or dealer and a
government securities broker or government securities
dealer registered or required to register pursuant to
section 15C(a)(1)(A) of this title.
(49) The terms ``person associated with a transfer
agent'' and ``associated person of a transfer agent''
mean any person (except an employee whose functions are
solely clerical or ministerial) directly engaged in the
management, direction, supervision, or performance of
any of the transfer agent's activities with respect to
transfer agent functions, and any person directly or
indirectly controlling such activities or controlled by
the transfer agent in connection with such activities.
(50) The term ``foreign securities authority'' means
any foreign government, or any governmental body or
regulatory organization empowered by a foreign
government to administer or enforce its laws as they
relate to securities matters.
(51)(A) The term ``penny stock'' means any equity
security other than a security that is--
(i) registered or approved for registration
and traded on a national securities exchange
that meets such criteria as the Commission
shall prescribe by rule or regulation for
purposes of this paragraph;
(ii) authorized for quotation on an automated
quotation system sponsored by a registered
securities association, if such system (I) was
established and in operation before January 1,
1990, and (II) meets such criteria as the
Commission shall prescribe by rule or
regulation for purposes of this paragraph;
(iii) issued by an investment company
registered under the Investment Company Act of
1940;
(iv) excluded, on the basis of exceeding a
minimum price, net tangible assets of the
issuer, or other relevant criteria, from the
definition of such term by rule or regulation
which the Commission shall prescribe for
purposes of this paragraph; or
(v) exempted, in whole or in part,
conditionally or unconditionally, from the
definition of such term by rule, regulation, or
order prescribed by the Commission.
(B) The Commission may, by rule, regulation, or
order, designate any equity security or class of equity
securities described in clause (i) or (ii) of
subparagraph (A) as within the meaning of the term
``penny stock'' if such security or class of securities
is traded other than on a national securities exchange
or through an automated quotation system described in
clause (ii) of subparagraph (A).
(C) In exercising its authority under this paragraph
to prescribe rules, regulations, and orders, the
Commission shall determine that such rule, regulation,
or order is consistent with the public interest and the
protection of investors.
(52) The term ``foreign financial regulatory
authority'' means any (A) foreign securities authority,
(B) other governmental body or foreign equivalent of a
self-regulatory organization empowered by a foreign
government to administer or enforce its laws relating
to the regulation of fiduciaries, trusts, commercial
lending, insurance, trading in contracts of sale of a
commodity for future delivery, or other instruments
traded on or subject to the rules of a contract market,
board of trade, or foreign equivalent, or other
financial activities, or (C) membership organization a
function of which is to regulate participation of its
members in activities listed above.
(53)(A) The term ``small business related security''
means a security that meets standards of credit-
worthiness as established by the Commission, and
either--
(i) represents an interest in 1 or more
promissory notes or leases of personal property
evidencing the obligation of a small business
concern and originated by an insured depository
institution, insured credit union, insurance
company, or similar institution which is
supervised and examined by a Federal or State
authority, or a finance company or leasing
company; or
(ii) is secured by an interest in 1 or more
promissory notes or leases of personal property
(with or without recourse to the issuer or
lessee) and provides for payments of principal
in relation to payments, or reasonable
projections of payments, on notes or leases
described in clause (i).
(B) For purposes of this paragraph--
(i) an ``interest in a promissory note or a
lease of personal property'' includes ownership
rights, certificates of interest or
participation in such notes or leases, and
rights designed to assure servicing of such
notes or leases, or the receipt or timely
receipt of amounts payable under such notes or
leases;
(ii) the term ``small business concern''
means a business that meets the criteria for a
small business concern established by the Small
Business Administration under section 3(a) of
the Small Business Act;
(iii) the term ``insured depository
institution'' has the same meaning as in
section 3 of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act;
and
(iv) the term ``insured credit union'' has
the same meaning as in section 101 of the
Federal Credit Union Act.
(54) Qualified investor.--
(A) Definition.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), for purposes of this title,
the term ``qualified investor'' means--
(i) any investment company registered
with the Commission under section 8 of
the Investment Company Act of 1940;
(ii) any issuer eligible for an
exclusion from the definition of
investment company pursuant to section
3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act
of 1940;
(iii) any bank (as defined in
paragraph (6) of this subsection),
savings association (as defined in
section 3(b) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act), broker, dealer,
insurance company (as defined in
section 2(a)(13) of the Securities Act
of 1933), or business development
company (as defined in section 2(a)(48)
of the Investment Company Act of 1940);
(iv) any small business investment
company licensed by the United States
Small Business Administration under
section 301 (c) or (d) of the Small
Business Investment Act of 1958;
(v) any State sponsored employee
benefit plan, or any other employee
benefit plan, within the meaning of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974, other than an individual
retirement account, if the investment
decisions are made by a plan fiduciary,
as defined in section 3(21) of that
Act, which is either a bank, savings
and loan association, insurance
company, or registered investment
adviser;
(vi) any trust whose purchases of
securities are directed by a person
described in clauses (i) through (v) of
this subparagraph;
(vii) any market intermediary exempt
under section 3(c)(2) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940;
(viii) any associated person of a
broker or dealer other than a natural
person;
(ix) any foreign bank (as defined in
section 1(b)(7) of the International
Banking Act of 1978);
(x) the government of any foreign
country;
(xi) any corporation, company, or
partnership that owns and invests on a
discretionary basis, not less than
$25,000,000 in investments;
(xii) any natural person who owns and
invests on a discretionary basis, not
less than $25,000,000 in investments;
(xiii) any government or political
subdivision, agency, or instrumentality
of a government who owns and invests on
a discretionary basis not less than
$50,000,000 in investments; or
(xiv) any multinational or
supranational entity or any agency or
instrumentality thereof.
(B) Altered thresholds for asset-backed
securities and loan participations.--For
purposes of section 3(a)(5)(C)(iii) of this
title and section 206(a)(5) of the Gramm-Leach-
Bliley Act, the term ``qualified investor'' has
the meaning given such term by subparagraph (A)
of this paragraph except that clauses (xi) and
(xii) shall be applied by substituting
``$10,000,000'' for ``$25,000,000''.
(C) Additional authority.--The Commission
may, by rule or order, define a ``qualified
investor'' as any other person, taking into
consideration such factors as the financial
sophistication of the person, net worth, and
knowledge and experience in financial matters.
(55)(A) The term ``security future'' means a contract
of sale for future delivery of a single security or of
a narrow-based security index, including any interest
therein or based on the value thereof, except an
exempted security under section 3(a)(12) of this title
as in effect on the date of the enactment of the
Futures Trading Act of 1982 (other than any municipal
security as defined in section 3(a)(29) as in effect on
the date of the enactment of the Futures Trading Act of
1982). The term ``security future'' does not include
any agreement, contract, or transaction excluded from
the Commodity Exchange Act under section 2(c), 2(d),
2(f), or 2(g) of the Commodity Exchange Act (as in
effect on the date of the enactment of the Commodity
Futures Modernization Act of 2000) or title IV of the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000.
(B) The term ``narrow-based security index'' means an
index--
(i) that has 9 or fewer component securities;
(ii) in which a component security comprises
more than 30 percent of the index's weighting;
(iii) in which the five highest weighted
component securities in the aggregate comprise
more than 60 percent of the index's weighting;
or
(iv) in which the lowest weighted component
securities comprising, in the aggregate, 25
percent of the index's weighting have an
aggregate dollar value of average daily trading
volume of less than $50,000,000 (or in the case
of an index with 15 or more component
securities, $30,000,000), except that if there
are two or more securities with equal weighting
that could be included in the calculation of
the lowest weighted component securities
comprising, in the aggregate, 25 percent of the
index's weighting, such securities shall be
ranked from lowest to highest dollar value of
average daily trading volume and shall be
included in the calculation based on their
ranking starting with the lowest ranked
security.
(C) Notwithstanding subparagraph (B), an index is not
a narrow-based security index if--
(i)(I) it has at least nine component
securities;
(II) no component security comprises more
than 30 percent of the index's weighting; and
(III) each component security is--
(aa) registered pursuant to section
12 of the Securities Exchange Act of
1934;
(bb) one of 750 securities with the
largest market capitalization; and
(cc) one of 675 securities with the
largest dollar value of average daily
trading volume;
(ii) a board of trade was designated as a
contract market by the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission with respect to a contract
of sale for future delivery on the index,
before the date of the enactment of the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000;
(iii)(I) a contract of sale for future
delivery on the index traded on a designated
contract market or registered derivatives
transaction execution facility for at least 30
days as a contract of sale for future delivery
on an index that was not a narrow-based
security index; and
(II) it has been a narrow-based security
index for no more than 45 business days over 3
consecutive calendar months;
(iv) a contract of sale for future delivery
on the index is traded on or subject to the
rules of a foreign board of trade and meets
such requirements as are jointly established by
rule or regulation by the Commission and the
Commodity Futures Trading Commission;
(v) no more than 18 months have passed since
the date of the enactment of the Commodity
Futures Modernization Act of 2000 and--
(I) it is traded on or subject to the
rules of a foreign board of trade;
(II) the offer and sale in the United
States of a contract of sale for future
delivery on the index was authorized
before the date of the enactment of the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of
2000; and
(III) the conditions of such
authorization continue to be met; or
(vi) a contract of sale for future delivery
on the index is traded on or subject to the
rules of a board of trade and meets such
requirements as are jointly established by
rule, regulation, or order by the Commission
and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission.
(D) Within 1 year after the enactment of the
Commodity Futures Modernization Act of 2000, the
Commission and the Commodity Futures Trading Commission
jointly shall adopt rules or regulations that set forth
the requirements under clause (iv) of subparagraph (C).
(E) An index that is a narrow-based security index
solely because it was a narrow-based security index for
more than 45 business days over 3 consecutive calendar
months pursuant to clause (iii) of subparagraph (C)
shall not be a narrow-based security index for the 3
following calendar months.
(F) For purposes of subparagraphs (B) and (C) of this
paragraph--
(i) the dollar value of average daily trading
volume and the market capitalization shall be
calculated as of the preceding 6 full calendar
months; and
(ii) the Commission and the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission shall, by rule or
regulation, jointly specify the method to be
used to determine market capitalization and
dollar value of average daily trading volume.
(56) The term ``security futures product'' means a
security future or any put, call, straddle, option, or
privilege on any security future.
(57)(A) The term ``margin'', when used with respect
to a security futures product, means the amount, type,
and form of collateral required to secure any extension
or maintenance of credit, or the amount, type, and form
of collateral required as a performance bond related to
the purchase, sale, or carrying of a security futures
product.
(B) The terms ``margin level'' and ``level of
margin'', when used with respect to a security futures
product, mean the amount of margin required to secure
any extension or maintenance of credit, or the amount
of margin required as a performance bond related to the
purchase, sale, or carrying of a security futures
product.
(C) The terms ``higher margin level'' and ``higher
level of margin'', when used with respect to a security
futures product, mean a margin level established by a
national securities exchange registered pursuant to
section 6(g) that is higher than the minimum amount
established and in effect pursuant to section
7(c)(2)(B).
(58) Audit committee.--The term ``audit committee''
means--
(A) a committee (or equivalent body)
established by and amongst the board of
directors of an issuer for the purpose of
overseeing the accounting and financial
reporting processes of the issuer and audits of
the financial statements of the issuer; and
(B) if no such committee exists with respect
to an issuer, the entire board of directors of
the issuer.
(59) Registered public accounting firm.--The term
``registered public accounting firm'' has the same
meaning as in section 2 of the Sarbanes-Oxley Act of
2002.
(60) Credit rating.--The term ``credit rating'' means
an assessment of the creditworthiness of an obligor as
an entity or with respect to specific securities or
money market instruments.
(61) Credit rating agency.--The term ``credit rating
agency'' means any person--
(A) engaged in the business of issuing credit
ratings on the Internet or through another
readily accessible means, for free or for a
reasonable fee, but does not include a
commercial credit reporting company;
(B) employing either a quantitative or
qualitative model, or both, to determine credit
ratings; and
(C) receiving fees from either issuers,
investors, or other market participants, or a
combination thereof.
(62) Nationally recognized statistical rating
organization.--The term ``nationally recognized
statistical rating organization'' means a credit rating
agency that--
(A) issues credit ratings certified by
qualified institutional buyers, in accordance
with section 15E(a)(1)(B)(ix), with respect
to--
(i) financial institutions, brokers,
or dealers;
(ii) insurance companies;
(iii) corporate issuers;
(iv) issuers of asset-backed
securities (as that term is defined in
section 1101(c) of part 229 of title
17, Code of Federal Regulations, as in
effect on the date of enactment of this
paragraph);
(v) issuers of government securities,
municipal securities, or securities
issued by a foreign government; or
(vi) a combination of one or more
categories of obligors described in any
of clauses (i) through (v); and
(B) is registered under section 15E.
(63) Person associated with a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization.--The term ``person
associated with'' a nationally recognized statistical
rating organization means any partner, officer,
director, or branch manager of a nationally recognized
statistical rating organization (or any person
occupying a similar status or performing similar
functions), any person directly or indirectly
controlling, controlled by, or under common control
with a nationally recognized statistical rating
organization, or any employee of a nationally
recognized statistical rating organization.
(64) Qualified institutional buyer.--The term
``qualified institutional buyer'' has the meaning given
such term in section 230.144A(a) of title 17, Code of
Federal Regulations, or any successor thereto.
(79) Asset-backed security.--The term ``asset-backed
security''--
(A) means a fixed-income or other security
collateralized by any type of self-liquidating
financial asset (including a loan, a lease, a
mortgage, or a secured or unsecured receivable)
that allows the holder of the security to
receive payments that depend primarily on cash
flow from the asset, including--
(i) a collateralized mortgage
obligation;
(ii) a collateralized debt
obligation;
(iii) a collateralized bond
obligation;
(iv) a collateralized debt obligation
of asset-backed securities;
(v) a collateralized debt obligation
of collateralized debt obligations; and
(vi) a security that the Commission,
by rule, determines to be an asset-
backed security for purposes of this
section; and
(B) does not include a security issued by a
finance subsidiary held by the parent company
or a company controlled by the parent company,
if none of the securities issued by the finance
subsidiary are held by an entity that is not
controlled by the parent company.
(65) Eligible contract participant.--The term
``eligible contract participant'' has the same meaning
as in section 1a of the Commodity Exchange Act (7
U.S.C. 1a).
(66) Major swap participant.--The term ``major swap
participant'' has the same meaning as in section 1a of
the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a).
(67) Major security-based swap participant.--
(A) In general.--The term ``major security-
based swap participant'' means any person--
(i) who is not a security-based swap
dealer; and
(ii)(I) who maintains a substantial
position in security-based swaps for
any of the major security-based swap
categories, as such categories are
determined by the Commission, excluding
both positions held for hedging or
mitigating commercial risk and
positions maintained by any employee
benefit plan (or any contract held by
such a plan) as defined in paragraphs
(3) and (32) of section 3 of the
Employee Retirement Income Security Act
of 1974 (29 U.S.C. 1002) for the
primary purpose of hedging or
mitigating any risk directly associated
with the operation of the plan;
(II) whose outstanding security-based
swaps create substantial counterparty
exposure that could have serious
adverse effects on the financial
stability of the United States banking
system or financial markets; or
(III) that is a financial entity
that--
(aa) is highly leveraged
relative to the amount of
capital such entity holds and
that is not subject to capital
requirements established by an
appropriate Federal banking
agency; and
(bb) maintains a substantial
position in outstanding
security-based swaps in any
major security-based swap
category, as such categories
are determined by the
Commission.
(B) Definition of substantial position.--For
purposes of subparagraph (A), the Commission
shall define, by rule or regulation, the term
``substantial position'' at the threshold that
the Commission determines to be prudent for the
effective monitoring, management, and oversight
of entities that are systemically important or
can significantly impact the financial system
of the United States. In setting the definition
under this subparagraph, the Commission shall
consider the person's relative position in
uncleared as opposed to cleared security-based
swaps and may take into consideration the value
and quality of collateral held against
counterparty exposures.
(C) Scope of designation.--For purposes of
subparagraph (A), a person may be designated as
a major security-based swap participant for 1
or more categories of security-based swaps
without being classified as a major security-
based swap participant for all classes of
security-based swaps.
(68) Security-based swap.--
(A) In general.--Except as provided in
subparagraph (B), the term ``security-based
swap'' means any agreement, contract, or
transaction that--
(i) is a swap, as that term is
defined under section 1a of the
Commodity Exchange Act (without regard
to paragraph (47)(B)(x) of such
section); and
(ii) is based on--
(I) an index that is a
narrow-based security index,
including any interest therein
or on the value thereof;
(II) a single security or
loan, including any interest
therein or on the value
thereof; or
(III) the occurrence,
nonoccurrence, or extent of the
occurrence of an event relating
to a single issuer of a
security or the issuers of
securities in a narrow-based
security index, provided that
such event directly affects the
financial statements, financial
condition, or financial
obligations of the issuer.
(B) Rule of construction regarding master
agreements.--The term ``security-based swap''
shall be construed to include a master
agreement that provides for an agreement,
contract, or transaction that is a security-
based swap pursuant to subparagraph (A),
together with all supplements to any such
master agreement, without regard to whether the
master agreement contains an agreement,
contract, or transaction that is not a
security-based swap pursuant to subparagraph
(A), except that the master agreement shall be
considered to be a security-based swap only
with respect to each agreement, contract, or
transaction under the master agreement that is
a security-based swap pursuant to subparagraph
(A).
(C) Exclusions.--The term ``security-based
swap'' does not include any agreement,
contract, or transaction that meets the
definition of a security-based swap only
because such agreement, contract, or
transaction references, is based upon, or
settles through the transfer, delivery, or
receipt of an exempted security under paragraph
(12), as in effect on the date of enactment of
the Futures Trading Act of 1982 (other than any
municipal security as defined in paragraph (29)
as in effect on the date of enactment of the
Futures Trading Act of 1982), unless such
agreement, contract, or transaction is of the
character of, or is commonly known in the trade
as, a put, call, or other option.
(D) Mixed swap.--The term ``security-based
swap'' includes any agreement, contract, or
transaction that is as described in
subparagraph (A) and also is based on the value
of 1 or more interest or other rates,
currencies, commodities, instruments of
indebtedness, indices, quantitative measures,
other financial or economic interest or
property of any kind (other than a single
security or a narrow-based security index), or
the occurrence, non-occurrence, or the extent
of the occurrence of an event or contingency
associated with a potential financial,
economic, or commercial consequence (other than
an event described in subparagraph
(A)(ii)(III)).
(E) Rule of construction regarding use of the
term index.--The term ``index'' means an index
or group of securities, including any interest
therein or based on the value thereof.
(69) Swap.--The term ``swap'' has the same meaning as
in section 1a of the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C.
1a).
(70) Person associated with a security-based swap
dealer or major security-based swap participant.--
(A) In general.--The term ``person associated
with a security-based swap dealer or major
security-based swap participant'' or
``associated person of a security-based swap
dealer or major security-based swap
participant'' means--
(i) any partner, officer, director,
or branch manager of such security-
based swap dealer or major security-
based swap participant (or any person
occupying a similar status or
performing similar functions);
(ii) any person directly or
indirectly controlling, controlled by,
or under common control with such
security-based swap dealer or major
security-based swap participant; or
(iii) any employee of such security-
based swap dealer or major security-
based swap participant.
(B) Exclusion.--Other than for purposes of
section 15F(l)(2), the term ``person associated
with a security-based swap dealer or major
security-based swap participant'' or
``associated person of a security-based swap
dealer or major security-based swap
participant'' does not include any person
associated with a security-based swap dealer or
major security-based swap participant whose
functions are solely clerical or ministerial.
(71) Security-based swap dealer.--
(A) In general.--The term ``security-based
swap dealer'' means any person who--
(i) holds themself out as a dealer in
security-based swaps;
(ii) makes a market in security-based
swaps;
(iii) regularly enters into security-
based swaps with counterparties as an
ordinary course of business for its own
account; or
(iv) engages in any activity causing
it to be commonly known in the trade as
a dealer or market maker in security-
based swaps.
(B) Designation by type or class.--A person
may be designated as a security-based swap
dealer for a single type or single class or
category of security-based swap or activities
and considered not to be a security-based swap
dealer for other types, classes, or categories
of security-based swaps or activities.
(C) Exception.--The term ``security-based
swap dealer'' does not include a person that
enters into security-based swaps for such
person's own account, either individually or in
a fiduciary capacity, but not as a part of
regular business.
(D) De minimis exception.--The Commission
shall exempt from designation as a security-
based swap dealer an entity that engages in a
de minimis quantity of security-based swap
dealing in connection with transactions with or
on behalf of its customers. The Commission
shall promulgate regulations to establish
factors with respect to the making of any
determination to exempt.
(72) Appropriate federal banking agency.--The term
``appropriate Federal banking agency'' has the same
meaning as in section 3(q) of the Federal Deposit
Insurance Act (12 U.S.C. 1813(q)).
(73) Board.--The term ``Board'' means the Board of
Governors of the Federal Reserve System.
(74) Prudential regulator.--The term ``prudential
regulator'' has the same meaning as in section 1a of
the Commodity Exchange Act (7 U.S.C. 1a).
(75) Security-based swap data repository.--The term
``security-based swap data repository'' means any
person that collects and maintains information or
records with respect to transactions or positions in,
or the terms and conditions of, security-based swaps
entered into by third parties for the purpose of
providing a centralized recordkeeping facility for
security-based swaps.
(76) Swap dealer.--The term ``swap dealer'' has the
same meaning as in section 1a of the Commodity Exchange
Act (7 U.S.C. 1a).
(77) Security-based swap execution facility.--The
term ``security-based swap execution facility'' means a
trading system or platform in which multiple
participants have the ability to execute or trade
security-based swaps by accepting bids and offers made
by multiple participants in the facility or system,
through any means of interstate commerce, including any
trading facility, that--
(A) facilitates the execution of security-
based swaps between persons; and
(B) is not a national securities exchange.
(78) Security-based swap agreement.--
(A) In general.--For purposes of sections 9,
10, 16, 20, and 21A of this Act, and section 17
of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77q),
the term ``security-based swap agreement''
means a swap agreement as defined in section
206A of the Gramm-Leach-Bliley Act (15 U.S.C.
78c note) of which a material term is based on
the price, yield, value, or volatility of any
security or any group or index of securities,
or any interest therein.
(B) Exclusions.--The term ``security-based
swap agreement'' does not include any security-
based swap.
(80) Emerging growth company.--The term ``emerging
growth company'' means an issuer that had total annual
gross revenues of less than $1,000,000,000 (as such
amount is indexed for inflation every 5 years by the
Commission to reflect the change in the Consumer Price
Index for All Urban Consumers published by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics, setting the threshold to the
nearest 1,000,000) during its most recently completed
fiscal year. An issuer that is an emerging growth
company as of the first day of that fiscal year shall
continue to be deemed an emerging growth company until
the earliest of--
(A) the last day of the fiscal year of the
issuer during which it had total annual gross
revenues of $1,000,000,000 (as such amount is
indexed for inflation every 5 years by the
Commission to reflect the change in the
Consumer Price Index for All Urban Consumers
published by the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
setting the threshold to the nearest 1,000,000)
or more;
(B) the last day of the fiscal year of the
issuer following the fifth anniversary of the
date of the first sale of common equity
securities of the issuer pursuant to an
effective registration statement under the
Securities Act of 1933;
(C) the date on which such issuer has, during
the previous 3-year period, issued more than
$1,000,000,000 in non-convertible debt; or
(D) the date on which such issuer is deemed
to be a ``large accelerated filer'', as defined
in section 240.12b-2 of title 17, Code of
Federal Regulations, or any successor thereto.
[(80)] (81) Funding portal.--The term ``funding
portal'' means any person acting as an intermediary in
a transaction involving the offer or sale of securities
for the account of others, solely pursuant to section
4(6) of the Securities Act of 1933 (15 U.S.C. 77d(6)),
that does not--
(A) offer investment advice or
recommendations;
(B) solicit purchases, sales, or offers to
buy the securities offered or displayed on its
website or portal;
(C) compensate employees, agents, or other
persons for such solicitation or based on the
sale of securities displayed or referenced on
its website or portal;
(D) hold, manage, possess, or otherwise
handle investor funds or securities; or
(E) engage in such other activities as the
Commission, by rule, determines appropriate.
(b) The Commission and the Board of Governors of the Federal
Reserve System, as to matters within their respective
jurisdictions, shall have power by rules and regulations to
define technical, trade, accounting, and other terms used in
this title, consistently with the provisions and purposes of
this title.
(c) No provision of this title shall apply to, or be deemed
to include, any executive department or independent
establishment of the United States, or any lending agency which
is wholly owned, directly or indirectly, by the United States,
or any officer, agent, or employee of any such department,
establishment, or agency, acting in the course of his official
duty as such, unless such provision makes specific reference to
such department, establishment, or agency.
(d) No issuer of municipal securities or officer or employee
thereof acting in the course of his official duties as such
shall be deemed to be a ``broker'', ``dealer'', or ``municipal
securities dealer'' solely by reason of buying, selling, or
effecting transactions in the issuer's securities.
(e) Charitable Organizations.--
(1) Exemption.--Notwithstanding any other provision
of this title, but subject to paragraph (2) of this
subsection, a charitable organization, as defined in
section 3(c)(10)(D) of the Investment Company Act of
1940, or any trustee, director, officer, employee, or
volunteer of such a charitable organization acting
within the scope of such person's employment or duties
with such organization, shall not be deemed to be a
``broker'', ``dealer'', ``municipal securities
broker'', ``municipal securities dealer'', ``government
securities broker'', or ``government securities
dealer'' for purposes of this title solely because such
organization or person buys, holds, sells, or trades in
securities for its own account in its capacity as
trustee or administrator of, or otherwise on behalf of
or for the account of--
(A) such a charitable organization;
(B) a fund that is excluded from the
definition of an investment company under
section 3(c)(10)(B) of the Investment Company
Act of 1940; or
(C) a trust or other donative instrument
described in section 3(c)(10)(B) of the
Investment Company Act of 1940, or the settlors
(or potential settlors) or beneficiaries of any
such trust or other instrument.
(2) Limitation on compensation.--The exemption
provided under paragraph (1) shall not be available to
any charitable organization, or any trustee, director,
officer, employee, or volunteer of such a charitable
organization, unless each person who, on or after 90
days after the date of enactment of this subsection,
solicits donations on behalf of such charitable
organization from any donor to a fund that is excluded
from the definition of an investment company under
section 3(c)(10)(B) of the Investment Company Act of
1940, is either a volunteer or is engaged in the
overall fund raising activities of a charitable
organization and receives no commission or other
special compensation based on the number or the value
of donations collected for the fund.
(f) Consideration of Promotion of Efficiency, Competition,
and Capital Formation.--Whenever pursuant to this title the
Commission is engaged in rulemaking, or in the review of a rule
of a self-regulatory organization, and is required to consider
or determine whether an action is necessary or appropriate in
the public interest, the Commission shall also consider, in
addition to the protection of investors, whether the action
will promote efficiency, competition, and capital formation.
(g) Church Plans.--No church plan described in section 414(e)
of the Internal Revenue Code of 1986, no person or entity
eligible to establish and maintain such a plan under the
Internal Revenue Code of 1986, no company or account that is
excluded from the definition of an investment company under
section 3(c)(14) of the Investment Company Act of 1940, and no
trustee, director, officer or employee of or volunteer for such
plan, company, account, person, or entity, acting within the
scope of that person's employment or activities with respect to
such plan, shall be deemed to be a ``broker'', ``dealer'',
``municipal securities broker'', ``municipal securities
dealer'', ``government securities broker'', ``government
securities dealer'', ``clearing agency'', or ``transfer agent''
for purposes of this title--
(1) solely because such plan, company, person, or
entity buys, holds, sells, trades in, or transfers
securities or acts as an intermediary in making
payments in connection with transactions in securities
for its own account in its capacity as trustee or
administrator of, or otherwise on behalf of, or for the
account of, any church plan, company, or account that
is excluded from the definition of an investment
company under section 3(c)(14) of the Investment
Company Act of 1940; and
(2) if no such person or entity receives a commission
or other transaction-related sales compensation in
connection with any activities conducted in reliance on
the exemption provided by this subsection.
(h) Limited Exemption for Funding Portals.--
(1) In general.--The Commission shall, by rule,
exempt, conditionally or unconditionally, a registered
funding portal from the requirement to register as a
broker or dealer under section 15(a)(1), provided that
such funding portal--
(A) remains subject to the examination,
enforcement, and other rulemaking authority of
the Commission;
(B) is a member of a national securities
association registered under section 15A; and
(C) is subject to such other requirements
under this title as the Commission determines
appropriate under such rule.
(2) National securities association membership.--For
purposes of sections 15(b)(8) and 15A, the term
``broker or dealer'' includes a funding portal and the
term ``registered broker or dealer'' includes a
registered funding portal, except to the extent that
the Commission, by rule, determines otherwise, provided
that a national securities association shall only
examine for and enforce against a registered funding
portal rules of such national securities association
written specifically for registered funding portals.
* * * * * * *
MINORITY VIEWS
This bill would amend the definition of an emerging growth
company (EGC) to include all companies with a valuation of at
least $2 billion (up from $1 billion), and would also increase
the period under which a company can qualify as an EGC to 10
years (up from 5 years).
As background, EGC status was created by the JOBS Act of
2012 as a way to provide a temporary on-ramp for private start-
ups to go public without immediately needing to meet the burden
of the reporting obligations of a full-fledged public company.
A private company can qualify for EGC status--and therefore,
access to the public equity markets--if it is below a certain
age or valuation, and also commits to providing reduced legal
and financial disclosures which amount to an abbreviated
version of what a fully public issuer must disclose. This bill
would instead allow many more companies that would otherwise
graduate into full-blown public reporting company status--
subject to important investor protections and regulatory
guardrails--to skirt these requirements for a much longer
period of time, to the detriment of investors and the market.
For these reasons, we oppose H.R. 3323.
Sincerely,
Maxine Waters,
Ranking Member.
Nydia M. Velazquez,
Stephen F. Lynch,
Al Green,
Bill Foster,
Joyce Beatty,
Rashida Tlaib,
Sylvia R. Garcia,
Nikema Williams,
Members of Congress.
[all]