Nasdaq Launches Market for Private Companies

Nasdaq debutes market for private companies, taking aim at SecondMarket and others.

Logo - Nasdaq
Nasdaq launches marketplace for private companies.

Most people are familiar with Nasdaq as a stock exchange for many well known public companies.  Most people would like to forget Nasdaq for its handling of the Facebook IPO, but that’s another story.

For private companies, even those with shares held by many people, it is difficult for their shareholders to find a buyer for their shares.  Buyers often have a difficult time finding a way to invest in those companies if the Company is not offering directly to them on a private basis.

Nasdaq has launched a new capital marketplace for private companies that it claims will provide “qualifying” companies the tools and resources “to efficiently raise capital, control secondary transactions, and manage their equity-related functions.”  Nasdaq refers to it as a “platform for controlled liquidity.”

To qualify, a company must have one of the following:

  • funding of $30 million within the last 2 years and an enterprise value of $50 million, based on the most recent financing round
  • Total assets of $50 million and annual revenue of $50 million in the latest fiscal year or 2 of the last 3 fiscal years
  • shareholders’ equity of $5 million and a two-year operating history
  • backing by a recognized financial investor with a track record of successful venture investments

The qualifying company will be subject to governance and reporting requirements.

Nasdaq is taking aim at SecondMarket and the burgeoning market for secondary transactions and the coming deluge of crowdfunding and other platforms for private company finance that people have been predicting since the passage of the JOBS Act.  For their sake, I hope it goes better than the PORTAL market did way back when.

SEC To Vote On Rules For General Solicitation In Some Private Offerings

It has been quite a while since the SEC proposed rules relaxing the prohibition of general solicitation in Rule 506 and Rule 144A offerings.  The criticism to the proposed rules flowed from issuer and investor advocate groups for a variety of reasons.  These rules are required by Section 201(a) of the JOBS Act.

According to WSJ MarketWatch, the SEC will vote on the proposal on July 10.

At this point, it may be worth going back through the proposal to be ready for the new rules.  Issuers will be anxious to begin advertising.  However, the proposal includes onerous requirements for verifying investor eligibility.  We look forward to seeing what changes, if any, the SEC plans to make to the proposed rules.