Want to Buy Stock in Your Corner Bistro? The Government Opens Venture Capital Markets to the Masses
Part four in a four-part series on the sharing economy.
In 2008, the online platform, Indiegogo, created a new way for entrepreneurs, artists, and charities to raise funds for their passion projects known as "crowdfunding." In exchange for donating money to a project, users generally receive a "perk," like a t-shirt or a coffee mug. In 2009, Kickstarter got into the game, and today new ventures get launched everyday thanks to the significant capital raised through these websites.
But what if instead of free DVDs and tounge scrapers for your pet new companies could offer their funders an equity stake in the business itself? Security regulations dating back to the 1930s have made it difficult for companies to trade equity for cash. But two years ago president Obama signed the U.S. JOBS Act, which is supposed to open venture capital markets to the masses.
Indiegogo plans to open its platform to these sorts of deals. The company's co-founder, Danae Ringelmann, says equity crowdfunding will allow regular people to make investments based on their direct knowledge of specific industries. "There's a whole world of people who know what they know, but they don't have the ability to invest in what they know," says Ringelmann. "Equity crowdfunding is going to give mainstream investors the same opportunities that Wall Street has had forever."
But will Washington actually allow this new approach to work? It took a full year and a half after the passage of the U.S. JOBS ACT for the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to release a 585-page document laying out how it will regulate equity crowd funding. Among other things, companies that want to raise money on platforms like IndieGoGo will have to produce financial statements, provide "a narrative discussion of financial results," and file annual reports with the SEC. Compliance costs could chase away lots of promising ventures. And in a world of open information, why do we need the SEC getting in the way in the first place?
"If the SEC can just stay open and allow the platforms to experiment," says Ringelmann, "I think we'll get there."
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"If the SEC can just stay open and allow the platforms to experiment, I think we'll get there."
That 585 page document was them allowing you to experiment.
lulz
Obama made it illegal for a non-bank to own more then 3 real estate contracts...I seriously doubt the SEC and Obama would ever allow people to start issuing their own stock for their small businesses to the public.
You would be wrong again.
The JOBS Act is another pro-market success of his.
That's just a blanket assertion with no actual data. You might as well just be shouting out names.
58 million able bodied Americans unemployed and 0.1% GNP growth?
Yeah sure !!!JOBS!!! act is working great.
I would hate to see the zombie Armageddon that would be a JOBS act failure.
I want to know more about this. Crowd-funding a start up is a game-changer. It sound like such a win for the free-market, that I am skeptical.
*sounds*
Well, duh! The whole reason crowd funding as we know it today exists is because of the way old Joe Kennedy fucked up our equity markets. These days, if you need anything less than ten million, it's not worth the hassle to go public.
-jcr
We can also expect wall street to do all they can to squelch this, since there are hundreds of billions of dollars sitting in half-assed mutual funds, because the investment options available to middle and lower income people are so limited.
Half a trillion dollars flowing from Fidelity Magellan funds to creating jobs in tens of thousands of small businesses? Over their dead bodies.
-jcr
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