A Classic Example of a General Solicitation Failure

The SEC opinion in KCD Financial Inc. (SEC Opinion 34-80340, March 29, 2017) affirms a fine and disciplinary action against KCD for selling securities in a private placement when no exemption from registration was available under Rule 506. The KCD opinion makes clear that you can’t fix the general solicitation failure by then only selling only to people had a prior relationship with issuer.

The action is against KCD, a broker-dealer, for selling the unregistered securities of Westmount Realty Finance’s WRF Distressed Residential Fund 2011. The offering’s PPM stated that the securities were being made in reliance on an exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act and that interests in the Fund were being offered only to persons who were accredited investors as set forth in Regulation D. In 2011, that meant no general solicitation or advertising.

Westmount screwed up and issued a press release that ended up being published in two local newspapers. Westmount screwed up even further by linking to those newspaper articles from Westmount’s website.

As long ago as 1964, [the SEC] has held that the statutory definition of “offer to sell” included “any communication which is designed to procure orders for a security,” and that even a communication that did not on its face refer to a particular offering could nonetheless constitute an offer as long as it was “designed to awaken an interest” in the security. [Gearhart & Otis, Inc., Exchange Act Release No. 7329, 1964 SEC LEXIS 513, at *59 (June 2, 1964), aff’d on other grounds, 348 F.2d 798 (D.C. Cir. 1965)]

The articles reported that “Dallas-based Westmount Realty Finance LLC announced Tuesday that it launched a $10 million real estate fund to acquire bank-owned residential properties and nonperforming, discounted residential loans.” (Yes, the article is still visible online.) That seems to clearly be general solicitation.

The argument from KCD was that it did not generally solicit any of the actual investors in the WRF Fund. When prospective new investors called, KCD asked if they had seen the article. If yes, they were not allowed to invest.

This argument was rejected. Once you engage in a general solicitation in violation of Rule 502(c), the Rule 506 exemption is not available for any subsequent sales of the securities regardless of limiting the sales only to investors who did not see the general solicitation. SEC guidance in 1983 pointed out that soliciting people with a pre-existing relationship and had reasonably believed that the recipients had the knowledge and experience in financial and business matters that he or she was capable of evaluating the merits and risks of the prospective investment is not general solicitation. “The mere fact that a solicitation is directed only to accredited investors will not mean that the solicitation is in compliance with Rule 502(c). Rule 502(c) relates to the nature of the offering not the nature of the offerees.”

Some of this has gone away since the SEC changed the general solicitation rules. Most firms do not want to check the box that says they engaged in general solicitation, fearing it will create greater SEC scrutiny.

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