SEC Relaxes Accredited Investor Verification Rule For Wealthy People

An issuer raising capital using Rule 506(c) must take “reasonable steps” to verify that all the investors are accredited. Until now, that has normally meant using a third party like VerifyInvestor, which in turn gets a letter from the investor’s accountant. Now it’s going to be a little easier, at least for investors writing big checks.

In a private no-action letter, the SEC allowed the issuer to verify investors without looking at the investor’s tax returns, seeing a letter from the investor’s accountant, or using any of the other methods described in the regulations under Rule 506(c) if:

  • The investor is writing a big enough check — $200,000 for an individual and $1 million for an entity; and
  • The investor promises that he, she, or it is accredited and has not financed the investment through a third party; and
  • The issuer does not have actual knowledge of any facts indicating that the investor is not accredited or has financed the investment.

Technically, the no-action letter doesn’t have the same force as a statute or a regulation. It does, however, reflect the view of the staff of the SEC. Issuers and their lawyers generally can rely on no-action letters, with the understanding that the staff could decide to withdraw or modify its position at any time.

Verifying that an investor is accredited was already so easy, the question is why anyone bothered to ask for this no-action letter. I’m afraid the answer is that growing income and wealth disparities in this country. In some socio-economic circles and for some funds, everyone writes big checks, just as everyone is a “qualified purchaser” for purposes of section 3(c)(7) of the Investment Company Act. The result of the no-action letter is that for that segment of American society, the verification rules no longer exist. 

Two sets of rules, one for the wealthy, another for everyone else. I certainly understand the logic of the no-action letter, but I’m not sure it’s healthy in a macro sense. 

Questions? Let me know.

2 thoughts on “SEC Relaxes Accredited Investor Verification Rule For Wealthy People

  1. Mario

    I read the no action letter differently. I believe it is even more limited then you are describing. The offering has to have a $200,000 minimum purchase. Therefore, it is not a valid verification for every investment over $200,000.

    An issuer conducting a 506c offering with a minimum investment amount of 10k, 50k or 100k will not be able to rely on this verification method.

    1. crowdfundattny

      Could be, but I don’t think so. To me, it wouldn’t make sense to say it’s reasonable if ALL investors write $200,000 checks but not reasonable if only some do. The logic, I think, is that if someone can write a $200,000 check and swears she’s accredited, then it’s reasonable to believe her. That logic doesn’t change if another investor in the same offering writes a $5,000 check. Let me know if you hear anything about it. And thanks for reading.

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