On August 26, 2020, the Securities and Exchange Commission approved allowing the New York Stock Exchange to permit "direct listings" of newly public companies. The Nasdaq has had this ability for several years- companies like Spotify took advantage of this alternative method of going public....

I recently reviewed data from OTC Markets Group, Inc. noting that nine community banks with market capitalizations below $100 million have successfully completed Regulation A+ IPOs. All are trading on the platforms of OTC Markets, including OTCQX, OTCQB and Pink Current. Even better news: the...

The US House of Representatives yesterday passed the Regulation A+ Improvement Act of 2017 (although Congress.gov reports it as the "Regulation At Improvement Act"). This bill would increase the cap on amounts to be raised under Regulation A from $50 to $75 million. If the...

  Tomorrow night at a panel here at Duane Morris, we will hit official pre-launch on my latest book, Regulation A+ and Other Alternatives to a Traditional IPO (John Wiley & Sons). Here's info from Amazon about this guide to the new streamlined IPO process through...

Following interest from companies like Spotify, the New York Stock Exchange last week received SEC approval to list companies on the Exchange even if they are not conducting an IPO. These direct listings, sometimes known as self-filings, already are permitted on the Nasdaq. The Exchange...

It appears the initial public offering market is indeed waking up. Last Thursday, Snap Inc. raised $3.4 billion in its IPO onto the New York Stock Exchange. OK not the biggest ever, since Alibaba raised almost $22 billion in 2014. But it's the biggest tech...

Today I'm attending the Practising Law Institute's Securities Regulation Institute, the annual educational gathering of mostly big law firm securities lawyers. Keith Higgins, the SEC's very capable head of Corporation Finance, disclosed some interesting stats on how Regulation A+ is going. So far, since the new...

A Greek historian first wrote of them in the 5th Century BC. Marco Polo thought he saw some (but they were rhinos). Genghis Khan turned his army back from a planned invasion of India because one apparently bowed to him, which he thought was a...