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                            DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS

                                     Seth C. Oranburg*

                                              Abstract
    President Obama signed the Jumpstart Our Business Startups
(“JOBS Act”) o
---
 2012 into law to “help entrepreneurs raise the capital
they need to put Americans back to work and create an economy that’s
built to last.” The goal is to “democratize startups” by making capital
available to diverse entrepreneurs in new geographies. Yet the net e
---

---
ect
o
---
 securities regulations and market conditions is the opposite. Startup
companies are encouraged to stay private so capital is consolidating in
large, mature 
---
irms instead o
---
 recycling into new startups. Evidence o
---

consolidation is that once-rare “Unicorns” (billion-dollar startups) now
number at least 170. More money is going into huge private companies,
yet total venture capital investment is 
---
lat, so less is going to new
startups. This could stall out the innovation economy.
    Democratizing startups requires sa
---
e-harbor exemptions 
---
rom
securities regulations 
---
or both original issuance and resale o
---
 stock, but
securities regulations do not permit resale on exchanges. This Article
proposes “Rule 144B,” a regulatory provision that could be enacted
without an act o
---
 Congress, to permit transparent web-based venture
exchanges with 
---
raud-prevention intermediaries termed “independent
analysts.” This Article answers the SEC’s call 
---
or rulemaking comments
and in
---
orms Congress’s new work on JOBS Act 2.0.

                                     TABLE OF CONTENTS
INTRODUCTION ........................................................................................ 1014
PART I. SECURITIES REGULATION ........................................................... 1017
      A. Sunlight and Disclosures..................................................... 1018
      B. Regulatory Exemptions ........................................................ 1024
      C. The JOBS Act ....................................................................... 1029


    * Assistant Pro
---
essor, Duquesne University School o
---
 Law; J.D., University o
---

Chicago Law School, cum laude; B.A., University o
---
 Florida, magna cum laude. I am
grate
---
ul 
---
or comments 
---
rom Katharine Baker, Felice Batlan, Alexander Boni-Saenz,
Christopher Bucca
---
usco, Eli Elias, Cesar Rosado, Christopher Schmidt, and research
assistance 
---
rom Clare Willis.


                                                1013




        Electronic copy available at: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2639879
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1014              RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


PART II. PRIVATE PROBLEMS .................................................................. 1031
      A. Illiquidity Discount Asymmetry .......................................... 1037
      B. De Facto Non-Competes ....................................................... 1040
      C. Systemic Risks ...................................................................... 1044
         1. Breaking the Startup Financing Cycle .............................. 1045
         2. Trading in Unregulated Dark Pools ................................... 1047
         3. Trading in O
---

---
shore Stock Markets .................................... 1050
PART III. DEMOCRATIZING PRIVATE STOCK EXCHANGES........................ 1051
      A. Venture Exchanges ............................................................... 1053
      B. Private Independent Analysts ............................................. 1058
      C. Application ........................................................................... 1063
CONCLUSION ........................................................................................... 1065


                                       INTRODUCTION

    “Startup America” is the initiative by President Obama to create
strong startup ecosystems in every state.1 The initiative is supported by
recent legislation, the Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act o
---
 2012
(“JOBS Act”),2 which passed quickly with wide bipartisan support 
---
or its
goal to “allow Main Street small businesses and high-growth
enterprises to raise capital 
---
rom investors more e
---

---
iciently, allowing
small and young 
---
irms across the country to grow and hire 
---
aster.”3
Americans overwhelmingly support the policy goal o
---
 democratizing
startups, which means providing more capital to diverse
entrepreneurs—including women and minorities in novel geographies
outside o
---
 Silicon Valley—
---
or new business projects beyond high
technology. But Silicon Valley—and the entire startup economy—
cannot diversi
---
y under current securities regulations and market
conditions. In addition to allowing startups to sell stock through
crowd
---
unding and mini-IPOs, securities regulations must also allow
investors to resell that stock. This Article provides a novel and 
---
easible
regulatory solution to 
---
acilitate resale exchanges.



    1. Fact Sheet: White House Launches “Startup America” Initiative, WHITE HOUSE,
https://www.whitehouse.gov/startup-america-
---
act-sheet      [http://perma.cc/9JAZ-6KNN]
(last visited Mar. 26, 2016).
    2. Pub. L. No. 112-106, 126 Stat. 306 (2012) (codi
---
ied as amended in scattered
sections o
---
 15 U.S.C.).
    3. O
---

---
ice o
---
 the Press Sec’y, President Obama to Sign Jumpstart Our Business
Startups (JOBS) Act, WHITE HOUSE (Apr. 5, 2012), https://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-
o
---

---
ice/2012/04/05/president-obama-sign-jumpstart-our-business-startups-jobs-act [http://
perma.cc/Z5GZ-9L2J].




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                           1015


    The JOBS Act’s goal o
---
 democratizing startups is stymied by other
securities regulations working at cross-purposes. Securities regulations
have three goals, as stated by the Securities and Exchange Commission
(the “SEC”)—the agency created to carry out these goals: protecting
investors, maintaining orderly capital markets, and 
---
acilitating e
---

---
icient
capital 
---
ormation.4 The JOBS Act prioritizes capital 
---
ormation, but
other laws prioritize protecting investors through sa
---
eguards and
mandatory disclosures, which can make capital 
---
ormation less e
---

---
icient.5
The net impact o
---
 these securities regulations and capital markets is to
encourage startups to stay private instead o
---
 going public. This trend o
---

startups staying private leads to consolidation o
---
 capital in a 
---
ew large
startups instead o
---
 recycling it into many smaller startups across the
country.6
    Staying private limits liquidity and undermines democratizing
startups in three ways. First, the new, smaller investors that the JOBS
Act hopes to attract will be discouraged by the inability to resell their
stock, especially because the established, larger investors have better
access to o
---

---
-exchange resale markets.7 Second, mainly young
companies create jobs, but staying private means capital is consolidated
in more mature companies instead o
---
 recycled into young organizations.
Moreover, startup employees paid in stock options 
---
ind themselves with
a de 
---
acto non-compete until the company goes public, which distorts
labor markets in unexpected ways.8 Third, wealthy and in
---
luential
investors who need to resell large blocks o
---
 stock can do so only in secret
trading environments, which, like “dark pools,”9 promote opportunism


    4. The Investor’s Advocate: How the SEC Protects Investors, Maintains Market
Integrity, and Facilitates Capital Formation, U.S. SEC. & EXCHANGE COMMISSION,
http://www.sec.gov/about/whatwedo.shtml [http://perma.cc/HV7J-RRFA] (last modi
---
ied
June 10, 2013).
    5. See, e.g., Stuart R. Cohn, The New Crowd
---
unding Registration Exemption: Good
Idea, Bad Execution, 64 FLA. L. REV. 1433, 1439−44 (2012).
    6. For a discussion o
---
 how and why startups are staying private, see in
---
ra Part II.
Staying private—which the JOBS Act encourages—undermines the stated purposes o
---
 the
JOBS Act in the 
---
ollowing way: (1) small investors are disadvantaged; (2) stock options
are devalued; and (3) “dark pools” persist. See in
---
ra note 9 
---
or a discussion o
---
 “dark pools.”
    7. See in
---
ra Part II.A.
    8. See in
---
ra Part II.B.
    9. Dark pools are trading markets available and known to very 
---
ew investors. Brian
G. Cartwright, General Counsel, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, Speech by SEC Sta
---

---
: The
Future o
---
 Securities Regulation (Oct. 24, 2007), https://www.sec.gov/news/speech/2007/
spch102407bgc.htm. Common traders cannot get liquidity in dark pools—only big banks
and hardcore analysists know they exist. Id. (“The second 
---
orm o
---
 deretailization I want to
discuss is the development and growth over the last several decades o
---
 important new
trading markets that are entirely closed to retail investors. The ‘dark pools’ o
---
 liquidity
that have garnered some press o
---
 late are one example, but perhaps the most 
---
amiliar is




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1016            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


and 
---
raud while providing none o
---
 the virtues o
---
 public exchanges like
price discovery.10 Without liquidity, startup capital cannot be recycled.
    Today’s private stock markets have not developed exchanges—
markets 
---
or the easy resale o
---
 standardized units o
---
 private-company
stock—because such exchanges would almost certainly be unlaw
---
ul
under current securities regulations. Without secondary markets,
private-company stock is hard to resell, or is “illiquid,” which creates a
number o
---
 problems discussed in detail in this Article. SharesPost
appears to interpret SEC no-action letters to prohibit it 
---
rom making
o
---

---
ers to buy or sell securities because its own guidelines, promulgated
a
---
ter the SEC guidance was issued, explain that SharesPost re
---
rains

---
rom this behavior.11 FundersClub obtained a no-action letter 
---
rom the
SEC that permits it to solicit investment in select private companies
only i
---
 it does not receive any transaction-based compensation.12
AngelList received a no-action letter permitting it to aggregate
investors only i
---
 it will not handle any customer 
---
unds or securities.13
SecondMarket stopped operating its resale auction and has shut out
retail investors completely.14 Firms will not develop a private-stock
exchange unless there is a clear legal way to operate it.


the 144A debt market. Promulgated by the SEC in 1990, Rule 144A removed most o
---
 the
regulatory impediments to secondary market transactions between large institutions that
quali
---
y as ‘QIBs.’ ‘QIB’ or ‘Q-I-B’ is the acronym 
---
or ‘quali
---
ied institutional buyer,’ a term
de
---
ined in Rule 144A generally to mean institutions that have at least $100 million
invested in securities.”).
   10. See in
---
ra Part II.C.
   11. See S HARES P OST F IN . C ORP ., A SHARESPOST PRIMER ON SECONDARY MARKET
SECURITIES LAW (2012), https://sharespost.com/site/assets/
---
iles/3063/primer_on_second
ary_market_securities_law.pd
---
 [http://perma.cc/SEX4-8LLA] (“Furthermore, in a series o
---

no-action letters, the SEC has indicated that a private o
---

---
ering distributed electronically
is not a general solicitation so long as the 
---
ollowing circumstances apply: The postings are
made on a password-protected web page that cannot be accessed by the general public.
The password-protected web page is available to a particular investor only a
---
ter a
determination is made that the investor is accredited. The questionnaires or 
---
orms by
which accredited investors are quali
---
ied do not re
---
erence any speci
---
ic transaction posted
or to be posted to the site. A potential investor can purchase securities only in
transactions that are posted a
---
ter the investor’s quali
---
ication.”).
   12. FundersClub Inc. & FundersClub Mgmt. LLC, SEC No-Action Letter, 2013 WL
1229456, at *3 (Mar. 26, 2013) (“The o
---

---
icers, directors and employees o
---
 FundersClub and
FC Inc. and FC Management personally do not receive transaction-based compensation

---
or their e
---

---
orts in raising investments 
---
or the investment 
---
unds.”).
   13. AngelList LLC, SEC No-Action Letter, 2013 WL 1279194, at *4 (Mar. 28, 2013)
(“Neither AngelList Advisors nor any Lead Angel will handle any customer 
---
unds or
securities.”).
   14. Jen Wieczner, Investing in Private Startups Is a Hot Trend. But, Sorry, You’re Not
Invited, FORTUNE (Aug. 14, 2014, 7:36 AM), http://
---
ortune.com/2014/08/14/private-equity-
retail-investors-buy-private-company-shares/ (“While the old model allowed shareholders




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1017


    SEC Commissioner Luis A. Aguilar recently asked 
---
or “any and all
viable suggestions as to how to improve the secondary [resale] trading
environment 
---
or shares o
---
 small business securities.”15 Meanwhile,
Congress is working on JOBS Act 2.0.16 This Article addresses the
concerns o
---
 both regulators and legislators by providing the regulatory
solution that 
---
ollows 
---
rom its theoretical analysis: the SEC should
institute a sa
---
e-harbor exemption that allows public venture stock
exchanges to 
---
acilitate web-based transactions.17 To prevent 
---
raud and
solve rational apathy and in
---
ormation asymmetry problems, this Article
proposes a new “Rule 144B” sa
---
e harbor that requires exchanges employ
“independent analysts.”18 This hybridized public stock analyst and
venture capital manager 
---
ills a new role 
---
or this new type o
---
 stock
market. The 144B exchange provides liquidity and investor protections
that are necessary 
---
or e
---

---
icient capital markets.
    This Article proceeds as 
---
ollows. Part I explores securities
regulation in a novel light, with an emphasis on how the normative
goals o
---
 the JOBS Act are unique among securities regulation statutes.
Part II contributes a new analysis o
---
 the phenomenon o
---
 staying
private, which demonstrates how this growing trend 
---
rustrates
democratizing startups. Part III argues that securities regulations can
achieve the goal o
---
 democratizing startups while protecting investors
through a new regulatory solution that the SEC can implement without
an act o
---
 Congress. This Article concludes with brie
---
 insights about the

---
uture o
---
 securities regulations.

                        PART I. SECURITIES REGULATION

   Securities regulation has three goals: protecting investors,
maintaining orderly capital markets, and 
---
acilitating e
---

---
icient capital


to auction their stakes to any willing buyer, sometimes independent o
---
 the company’s
approval, SecondMarket today only works with the private companies themselves to host
o
---

---
icial secondary transactions where the companies set the price o
---
 their own shares and
choose the buyers.”).
   15. Luis A. Aguilar, Comm’r, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, Public Statement, The Need

---
or Greater Secondary Market Liquidity 
---
or Small Businesses (Mar. 4, 2015),
http://www.sec.gov/news/statement/need-
---
or-greater-secondary-market-liquidity-
---
or-small
-businesses.html.
   16. Sarah N. Lynch, U.S. House Republicans Prepare a Second JOBS Act Bill; Critics
See Dangers, THOMSON REUTERS (Apr. 9, 2014, 2:41 PM), http://www.reuters.
com/article/2014/04/09/house-sec-bills-idUSL2N0N10ZJ20140409 [http://perma.cc/E69H-
HJZN] (statement o
---
 Representative Scott Garrett, R-NJ) (“The costs to these companies
o
---
 going and staying public remains [sic] unacceptably high.”).
   17. See in
---
ra Part III.A.
   18. See in
---
ra Part III.B.




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1018           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313



---
ormation.19 These goals are o
---
ten in tension, and this Part will explain
how the normative goals o
---
 securities regulation have con
---
licted over
time by situating their legislative history in their historical and
academic contexts.
    The very brie
---
 history is that Congress enacted disclosure rules in
response to scandals and economic pessimism, and Congress exacted
exemptive rules in response to optimism and economic growth. Section
A explains that the U.S. government inaugurated the 
---
ederal securities
laws and created new securities regulations in this context o
---
 economic
catastrophes and anti-Wall Street sentiments to protect investors
through mandatory disclosures. Section B describes exemptions to those
disclosure rules that the SEC created to balance investor protection
with the need 
---
or capital 
---
ormation. Section C introduces the JOBS Act,
the most remarkably deregulatory securities law statute, which created
new exemptions 
---
rom disclosures 
---
or entrepreneurs to 
---
acilitate startup
capital 
---
ormation and thereby create jobs. This Part reveals how 
---
ederal
securities laws work at cross-purposes, which 
---
rustrates the goals o
---
 the
JOBS Act.

A. Sunlight and Disclosures

    The initial 
---
ederal securities laws developed in response to economic
catastrophe. In the so-called “Roaring Twenties,” post-World War I
America experienced incredible economic growth. “[A]pproximately
$50 billion o
---
 new securities were sold in the United States” that
decade.20 This bull market collapsed on the in
---
amous Black Thursday,
October 24, 1929.21 By the 
---
ollowing Tuesday, the stock market lost
thirty billion dollars.22 From September 1, 1929 to July 1, 1932, the
NYSE 
---
ell eighty-three percent.23 This crash a
---

---
ected the entire nation.



   19. See, e.g., SEC Budget Hearing Be
---
ore the Subcomm. on Fin. Servs. & Gen. Gov’t o
---

the S. Comm. on Appropriations, 113th Cong. (2013) (testimony o
---
 Mary Jo White, Chair,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) (remarking on the SEC’s “three-part mission:
to protect investors, maintain . . . e
---

---
icient markets, and 
---
acilitate capital 
---
ormation”).
   20. J OEL S ELIGMAN , THE TRANSFORMATION OF WALL STREET: A HISTORY OF THE
SECURITIES AND EXCHANGE COMMISSION AND MODERN CORPORATE FINANCE 1 (rev. ed.
1995).
   21. Id. at 2−3.
   22. Timeline: Timeline o
---
 the Great Depression, PBS, http://www.pbs.org/wgbh/
americanexperience/
---
eatures/timeline/rails-timeline/ [http://perma.cc/X9H3-2BTZ] (last
visited Mar. 27, 2016).
   23. SELIGMAN, supra note 20, at 1; see also Cynthia A. Williams, The Securities and
Exchange Commission and Corporate Social Transparency, 112 HARV. L. REV. 1197, 1223
(1999).




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1019


Unemployment skyrocketed 
---
rom 1.5 million in 1929 to twelve million
in 1932.24
    When President Franklin Roosevelt was elected in 1932, America
was locked in the grip o
---
 the Great Depression. The public outcry
against Wall Street led the Senate Committee on Banking and
Currency to hold the Pecora hearings, which examined securities
dealings and stock exchange practices.25 These hearings 
---
ound evidence
o
---
 extensive problems in securities markets.26
    The U.S. Congress introduced 
---
ederal securities laws in the 1930s to
restore investor con
---
idence, which was destroyed by the Great
Depression and the scandals that led up to that economic disaster. At
the time, scholars, legislators, and judges seemed to agree with
Supreme Court Justice Louis D. Brandeis’s 1914 observation about

---
inancial markets: “Sunlight is said to be the best o
---
 disin
---
ectants;
electric light the most e
---

---
icient policeman.”27 The Securities Act o
---
 1933
embodies Brandeis’s “sunlight” policy by creating a comprehensive
disclosure regime that requires companies to produce public
in
---
ormation be
---
ore selling stock in public capital markets.28
    Pro
---
essor Felix Frank
---
urter, who assembled the dra
---
ting team 
---
or
the Securities Act, explained that the primary goal o
---
 early 
---
ederal
securities disclosure rules was to illuminate corporate activity o
---

securities issuers: “The in
---
ormation that must be 
---
urnished in the
registration statement is intended to reveal 
---
acts essential to a 
---
air
judgment upon the security o
---

---
ered.”29 Congress was also explicit about
using mandatory disclosure requirements to make corporations more




   24. LEONARD BAKER, BRANDEIS AND FRANKFURTER: A DUAL BIOGRAPHY 275 (1984).
   25. Williams, supra note 23, at 1223–24.
   26. Id. at 1224. The Pecora hearings 
---
ound evidence o
---
 “unsound credit practices
leading to excess speculation”; “manipulative devices . . . [that] produced a 
---
alse
impression o
---
 market activity and/or manipulated or depressed the prices o
---
 the
securities” (such as wash sales, matched orders, and short sales); “un
---
air or manipulative
market activities by insiders and directors”; “deceptive and manipulative devices” by
underwriters; “monopolistic practices by investment banks”; and “un
---
air practices, such as
the use o
---
 ‘pre
---
erred lists’ 
---
or distributing securities.” Id. at 1224–26.
   27. L OUIS D. B RANDEIS , OTHER PEOPLE’S MONEY AND HOW THE BANKERS USE IT 92
(1914).
   28. Williams, supra note 23, at 1212–13 (“Brandeis had a great deal o
---
 in
---
luence on
President Roosevelt’s thinking about disclosure as the proper approach to securities
regulation (Roosevelt had asked to be introduced to Brandeis soon a
---
ter Roosevelt’s
election). Brandeis also strongly in
---
luenced the thinking o
---
 Felix Frank
---
urter, who
oversaw the writing o
---
 the Securities Act and its passage through Congress.” (
---
ootnote
omitted)).
   29. Felix Frank
---
urter, The Federal Securities Act: II, FORTUNE, Aug. 1933, at 55.




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1020           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


accountable to the public.30 This was speci
---
ically designed to change
corporate behavior by inter
---
ering with business activity.31
    The normative goal o
---
 protecting investors, and thereby the whole
economy, was so strong that corporate governance discussion shi
---
ted

---
rom 
---
ree market to interventionist theories. In
---
luential scholars Adol
---

A. Berle and Gardiner C. Means encouraged the 
---
ederal government to
directly regulate corporate a
---

---
airs by preempting state incorporation
laws by a 
---
ederal incorporation regime.32 Although Congress expressly
agreed with Berle and Means that a key 
---
eature o
---
 a modern
corporation is the separation o
---
 ownership (by stockholders) and control
(by managers),33 which creates agency problems that cannot be solved
by contractual bargaining or private ordering,34 Congress never enacted
a 
---
ederal incorporation statute because that was deemed to unduly
hinder business 
---
ormation and development.35 This inconsistency
re
---
lects the consistent tension in securities laws between its competing
goals o
---
 protecting investors, maintaining orderly capital markets, and

---
acilitating capital 
---
ormation.
    Congress continued to advance the sunlight-on-securities agenda
with the Exchange Act o
---
 1934, which created the SEC. SEC Director
Annette L. Nazareth recently issued a 2003 press release restating the
goals o
---
 the SEC:

    The SEC is a “
---
ull disclosure” agency, and one o
---
 its primary
    missions is to strive to close in
---
ormation asymmetries that may
    exist among market participants. In the words o
---
 Justice


  30. Williams, supra note 23, at 1227 (“The legislative history o
---
 the Securities Act is
quite explicit about the use o
---
 disclosure (supported by broad liability provisions 
---
or
inaccurate and incomplete disclosure) as a regulatory means to 
---
oster greater public
accountability in the corporate enterprise.”).
  31. 77 CONG. REC. 2951 (1933) (statement o
---
 Rep. Reilly) (“Yes; the bill is intended to
inter
---
ere with business—that is, a certain kind o
---
 undesirable business—that has 
---
leeced
the American investors out o
---
 billions o
---
 dollars in the past decade.”).
  32. Letter 
---
rom William O. Douglas to Adol
---
 A. Berle, Jr. (Jan. 3, 1943) (on 
---
ile with
the Library o
---
 Congress).
  33. 77 CONG. REC. 2917−18 (1933) (statement o
---
 Rep. Rayburn) (“[T]oday the owner o
---

shares in a corporation possesses a mere symbol o
---
 ownership, while the power, the
responsibility, and the substance which have characterized ownership in the past have
been trans
---
erred to a separate group which holds control.”).
  34. See generally ADOLF A. BERLE & GARDINER C. MEANS, THE MODERN CORPORATION
AND PRIVATE PROPERTY (1932) (describing corporations as entities that separate
ownership and control and identi
---
ying problems that arise 
---
rom this dynamic).
  35. See Williams, supra note 23, at 1220 (“Adol
---
 Berle had suggested more direct
approaches to President Roosevelt 
---
or ensuring corporate accountability, including 
---
ederal
incorporation, but Roosevelt rejected 
---
ederal incorporation in 
---
avor o
---
 a disclosure-based
approach drawn 
---
rom Brandeis’s and Frank
---
urter’s ideas.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1021


    Brandeis, “Sunshine is the best disin
---
ectant.” Only through the
    steady 
---
low o
---
 timely, comprehensive and accurate in
---
ormation
    can people make sound investment decisions.36

    In modern times, economic crisis has also compelled Congress to
enact new 
---
ederal securities disclosure regulations. Starting in the 
---
all
o
---
 2001, one huge public corporation a
---
ter another became embroiled in
massive scandals.37 First Enron, which purported to be the seventh
largest corporation in the world,38 and then WorldCom, which acquired
sixty telecommunications 
---
irms in the prior 
---
i
---
teen years,39 turned out to
be mere paper tigers ensconced by “accounting irregularities” that were
perpetuated by management.40 Other major 
---
irms like Tyco,41


   36. Annette L. Nazareth, Dir., Div. o
---
 Mkt. Regulation, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n,
Remarks Be
---
ore the Brown University Commencement Forum: Come with Me to the SEC
(May 24, 2003), http://www.sec.gov/news/speech/spch052403aln.htm [http://perma.cc/
9Y5M-LWHQ].
   37. Larry E. Ribstein, Market vs. Regulatory Responses to Corporate Fraud: A Critique
o
---
 the Sarbanes-Oxley Act o
---
 2002, 28 J. CORP. L. 1, 2−3 (2002) (“These 
---
irms’ managers
have become poster boys 
---
or the problems o
---
 separation o
---
 ownership and control.”).
   38. Dan Ackman, Enron the Incredible, FORBES (Jan. 15, 2002, 12:00 PM), http://
www.
---
orbes.com/2002/01/15/0115enron.html (“[F]ew investors⎯and 
---
ew Wall Street
analysts⎯understood how Enron was booking revenue, even though the distorting
technique is what allowed Enron to be billed as the ‘seventh-largest company in
America.’”).
   39. Kurt Eichenwald, For WorldCom, Acquisitions Were Behinds Its Rise and Fall,
N.Y. TIMES (Aug. 8, 2002), http://www.nytimes.com/2002/08/08/business/
---
or-worldcom-
acquisitions-were-behind-its-rise-and-
---
all.html?pagewanted=all (“Mr. Ebbers talked o
---

how his company had grown enormously through no 
---
ewer than 65 mergers, capped by
the granddaddy o
---
 them all, its acquisition o
---
 MCI.”).
   40. John C. Co
---

---
ee, Jr., Re
---
orming the Securities Class Action: An Essay on Deterrence
and Its Implementation, 106 COLUM. L. REV. 1534, 1572 (2006) (“The persons most
responsible 
---
or the accounting irregularities at Enron, WorldCom, and a host o
---
 other
companies were managers who, beginning in the 1990s, began to be primarily
compensated with equity compensation and so had a strong incentive to recognize income
prematurely in order to in
---
late reported income.”).
   41. Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Sues Former Tyco CEO Kozlowski,
Two Others 
---
or Fraud (Sept. 12, 2002), https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2002-135.htm. The
CEO and CFO o
---
 Tyco were sentenced to eight to twenty-
---
ive years in prison 
---
or stealing
$150 million 
---
rom the corporate 
---
unds and in
---
lating income by $500 million. Catherine
Fredenburgh, Ex-Tyco CEO Demands Insurer Foot $17.8M Legal Bill, LAW360,
http://www.law360.com/articles/6835/ex-tyco-ceo-demands-insurer-
---
oot-17-8m-legal-bill
(last visited May 7, 2016) (“Tyco was accused by the SEC o
---
 in
---
lating its operating income
by at least $500 million through improper accounting practices related to some o
---
 the
hundreds o
---
 corporate acquisitions that Tyco engaged in as part o
---
 a massive expansion
that began in 1991.”); Shayna Jacobs & Corinne Lestch, Ex-Tyco CEO, Convicted o
---

Stealing $150M 
---
rom Company, Set 
---
or Release on Parole in January, DAILY NEWS (Dec. 4,
2013, 1:36 AM), http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/nyc-crime/tyco-ceo-convicted-
stealing-150m-
---
ree-article-1.1536865 (“A disgraced 
---
ormer Tyco CEO is expected to be




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02_ORANBURG.DOCX                                                                1/20/17 1:45 PM




1022            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


HealthSouth,42 Freddie Mac,43 American Insurance Group,44 Lehman
Brothers,45 and others 
---
ollowed in scandalous suit. The massive public
outcry against 
---
inancial manipulation galvanized Congress to pass
sweeping regulations governing corporate behavior, including the
Sarbanes-Oxley Act o
---
 2002 (“SOX”).46


paroled next month on his sentence 
---
or pil
---
ering $150 million 
---
rom the company, state
o
---

---
icials said.”).
   42. Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Charges HealthSouth Corp. CEO
Richard Scrushy with $1.4 Billion Accounting Fraud (Mar. 19, 2003), https://www.sec.gov/
news/press/2003-34.htm. The CEO o
---
 HealthSouth was indicted 
---
or thirty-six counts o
---

accounting 
---
raud 
---
or allegedly in
---
lating earnings by $1.4 billion and convicted o
---
 bribing
the Governor o
---
 Alabama. Id.; Krysten Craw
---
ord, Ex-HealthSouth CEO Scrushy Walks,
CNN MONEY (June 28, 2005, 4:37 PM), http://money.cnn.com/2005/06/28/news/ news
makers/scrushy_outcome/ (“The 52-year-old 
---
ounder and ex-CEO o
---
 HealthSouth 
---
aced 36
counts, including 
---
raud, money laundering and conspiracy charges.”); Carrie Johnson,
Jury Convicts HealthSouth Founder in Bribery Trial, WASH. POST (June 30, 2006), http://
www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2006/06/29/AR2006062901912.html (“An
Alabama jury yesterday convicted HealthSouth Corp. 
---
ounder Richard M. Scrushy—
acquitted last year o
---
 
---
ederal accounting-
---
raud charges—o
---
 paying hal
---
 a million dollars in
bribes to 
---
ormer governor Don Siegelman in exchange 
---
or a seat on a state health-care
board. . . . [T]he jury convicted [HealthSouth CEO] Scrushy o
---
 all six bribery, mail 
---
raud
and conspiracy charges.”).
   43. Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, Freddie Mac, Four Former Executives
Settle SEC Action Relating to Multi-Billion Dollar Accounting Fraud (Sept. 27, 2007),
https://www.sec.gov/news/press/2007/2007-205.htm. CEO, COO, and 
---
ormer senior
management o
---
 Freddie Mac misstated $5 billion in earnings and were 
---
ined $125 million
by the SEC, plus $50 million to settle 
---
ederal charges. Freddie Mac Pays $50M to Settle
Fraud Charges, ABC NEWS, http://abcnews.go.com/Business/story?id=3664473&page=1
(last visited May 7, 2016) (“Mortgage 
---
inance company Freddie Mac FRE will pay $50
million to settle 
---
ederal charges that it 
---
raudulently misstated earnings over a 
---
our-year
period. . . . Freddie paid a then-record $125 million civil 
---
ine in 2003 in a settlement with
the O
---

---
ice o
---
 Federal Housing Enterprise Oversight . . . .”); Jonathan D. Glater, Freddie
Mac Understated Its Earnings by $5 Billion, N.Y. TIMES (Nov. 22, 2003),
http://www.nytimes.com/2003/11/22/business/
---
reddie-mac-understated-its-earnings-by-5-
billion.html (“Freddie Mac said yesterday that it had understated its earnings by nearly
$5 billion over more than three years.”).
   44. Erik Holm, AIG, Other Insurers Settle Suit over Bid-Rigging, WALL ST. J. (Mar.
21, 2011, 7:25 PM), http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052748703858404576214972
845965148. The CEO o
---
 American International Group settled with multiple plainti
---

---
s 
---
or
over $2 billion 
---
or allegations o
---
 bid-ridding and stock-price manipulation and $3.9 billion

---
or 
---
raud. Id.; see also Case Summary: American International Group, Inc. (AIG)
Securities Litigation, STAN L. SCH., http://securities.stan
---
ord.edu/
---
ilings-case.html?id=
103311 (last visited May 7, 2006) (reviewing the entire history o
---
 AIG’s settlement,
showing a total o
---
 more than $2 billion in settlement).
   45. Michael J. de la Merced & Andrew Ross Sorkin, Report Details How Lehman Hid
Its Woes, N.Y. TIMES (Mar. 11, 2010), http://www.nytimes.com/2010/03/12/business/12
lehman.html?pagewanted=all&_r=0. Lehman executives and its accountants at Ernst &
Young allegedly hid 
---
i
---
ty billion dollars in loans disguised as sales. Id.
   46. Pub. L. No. 107-204, 116 Stat. 745 (codi
---
ied as amended in scattered sections o
---

11, 15, 18, 28, 29 U.S.C.).




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                       1023


   At the time o
---
 its promulgation, SOX was called “the most
important securities legislation since the original Federal securities
laws o
---
 the 1930’s.”47

    SOX creat[ed] the Public Company Accounting Oversight Board;
    . . . enhanc[ed] the independence o
---
 public company auditors;
    regulat[ed] corporate governance and responsibility; enhanc[ed]
    
---
inancial disclosure; regulat[ed] securities analyst con
---
licts o
---

    interest; . . . add[ed] several new substantive crimes under the
    securities laws and enhanc[ed] penalties 
---
or violations o
---
 the
    securities and other laws[;] . . . provided 
---
or additional 
---
unding
    o
---
 the SEC and enhancement o
---
 the SEC’s regulatory
    authority[;] commissioned several studies that required reports
    back to Congress[;] and contained an editorial comment on
    corporate tax returns.48

    Despite SOX’s disclosure requirements, another 
---
inancial crisis
occurred soon a
---
ter its enactment. The Great Recession started in 2007
with the subprime mortgage crisis and quickly expanded into a global

---
inancial crisis in which the global stock market dropped over 
---
i
---
ty
percent.49 National securities experts worried the Great Recession could
destabilize the entire geo-political economy.50 Once again, Congress
advanced the “sunlight” policy o
---
 securities regulation to advance the
normative goals o
---
 protecting investors and stabilizing markets by
passing the Dodd-Frank Wall Street Re
---
orm and Consumer Protection
Act o
---
 2010 (“Dodd-Frank”).51 Dodd-Frank 
---
urther increases the




  47. Implementation o
---
 the Sarbanes-Oxley Act o
---
 2002: Hearing Be
---
ore the S. Comm.
on Banking, Hous., & Urban A
---

---
airs, 108th Cong. 6 (2003) (statement o
---
 William H.
Donaldson, Chairman, U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission).
  48. Lyman P.Q. Johnson & Mark A. Sides, The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and Fiduciary
Duties, 30 WM. MITCHELL L. REV. 1149, 1154 (2004) (
---
ootnotes omitted).
  49. Sher Verick & Iyanatul Islam, The Great Recession o
---
 2008−2009: Causes,
Consequences and Policy Responses 23 (May 2010) (unpublished manuscript),
http://
---
tp.iza.org/dp4934.pd
---
 [http://perma.cc/C6E2-PMFX]; see also Barry Eichengreen &
Kevin Hjortshoj O’Rourke, What Do [sic] the New Data Tell Us?, VOX (Mar. 8, 2016),
http://voxeu.org/article/tale-two-depressions-what-do-new-data-tell-us-
---
ebruary-2010-up
date (“At their trough [world equity markets] were 50% below peak.”).
  50. See, e.g., Tom Gjelten, Economic Crisis Poses Threat to Global Stability, NAT’L
PUB. RADIO (Feb. 18, 2009, 12:07 AM), http://www.npr.org/templates/story/story.php?story
Id=100781975.
  51. Pub. L. No. 111-203, 124 Stat. 1376 (codi
---
ied as amended in scattered sections o
---

112 U.S.C.).




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02_ORANBURG.DOCX                                                             1/20/17 1:45 PM




1024           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


demands on public companies and requires them to make disclosures
with six provisions that pertain to corporate governance.52
    These “sunlight” policies may protect investors and prevent
systemic economic 
---
ailure,53 but they are not 
---
ree. They make it very
expensive, di
---

---
icult, and time-consuming to be a public company.
Cumulatively, the Securities Act, the Exchange Act, SOX, Dodd-Frank,
and other securities regulations 
---
orce an average company to incur
about $5.7 million in one-time costs to “go public” in an initial public
o
---

---
ering (“IPO”)—which allows it to raise money in the public capital
market—plus about 
---
ive to seven percent o
---
 gross proceeds raised in the
IPO and another $1.5 million in annual recurring costs as a result o
---

being public.54 In addition, public-company managers have to spend
time and e
---

---
ort on regulatory compliance instead o
---
 running and
growing the business.

B. Regulatory Exemptions

    Periodically, the SEC has recognized that sunlight policies and
disclosure regimes 
---
rustrate the goal o
---
 capital 
---
ormation. This
administrative agency has broad rulemaking power, which it has


  52. The six provisions o
---
 Dodd-Frank that pertain to corporate governance are:
requiring periodic shareholder advisory votes on executive compensation (the “say-on-pay”
mandate); mandating 
---
ully independent compensation committees 
---
or reporting
companies with speci
---
ied oversight responsibilities; requiring companies to provide
additional disclosures with respect to executive compensation; expanding SOX’s rules
regarding clawbacks o
---
 executive compensation; a
---

---
irming SEC authority to allow
shareholders to use the company’s proxy statement to nominate candidates to the board o
---

directors (the “shareholder access rule”); and requiring companies to disclose whether the
same person holds both the CEO and chairman o
---
 the board positions and why they either
do or do not do so. Id.
  53. However, many scholars argue that the sunlight policies are ine
---

---
ective in that
they do not actually protect investors or prevent system 
---
ailure. See, e.g., Stephen M.
Bainbridge, Dodd-Frank: Quack Federal Corporate Governance Round II, 95 MINN. L.
REV. 1779, 1821 (2011) (“Like their predecessors in SOX, the six key corporate governance
provisions o
---
 Dodd-Frank satis
---
y the key criteria o
---
 quack corporate governance.”);
Roberta Romano, The Sarbanes-Oxley Act and the Making o
---
 Quack Corporate
Governance, 114 YALE L.J. 1521, 1602 (2005) (“An extensive empirical literature suggests
that those mandates were seriously misconceived, because they are not likely to improve
audit quality or otherwise enhance 
---
irm per
---
ormance and thereby bene
---
it investors as
Congress intended.”).
  54. P RICEWATERHOUSE C OOPER , CONSIDERING AN IPO?: THE COSTS OF GOING AND
BEING PUBLIC MAY SURPRISE YOU 1 
---
ig.1 (2012), http://www.pwc.com/en_us/us/
transaction-services/publications/assets/pwc-cost-o
---
-ipo.pd
---
 [http://perma.cc/CNX5-9VZL]
(providing that there are $3.7 million directly attributable costs, plus $1 million other
incremental costs, plus $1 million to convert to a public company, equaling $5.7 million).
Additionally $1.5 million are incurred per year to stay public. Id.




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1025


exercised to create exemptions to 
---
ederal securities regulations that it
deems necessary 
---
or e
---

---
icient capital 
---
ormation. This Subpart discusses
the most important regulatory exemptions created by the SEC:
Regulation D,55 Rule 144,56 and Rule 144A.57 The next Subpart
discusses the new statutory exemption created by Congress.
     The SEC promulgated Regulation D in 1982 speci
---
ically to 
---
acilitate
capital 
---
ormation.58 Section 5 o
---
 the Securities Act requires all o
---

---
ers to
sell securities in interstate commerce to be registered with the SEC or
exempted 
---
rom registration.59 Regulation D provides three exemptions

---
rom registration requirements—Rules 504, 505, and 506—
---
or the
original issuance o
---
 securities.60 Rule 504 allows issuers to sell up to one
million dollars in securities in any twelve-month period to anyone.61
Rule 505 allows sales o
---
 up to 
---
ive million dollars to unlimited
“accredited investors” (“AIs”)62 and up to thirty-
---
ive other non-
accredited investors.63 Rule 506 allows unlimited sales to AIs.64
     It is critical to note that Regulation D pertains only to original
issuances (
---
irst o
---

---
ers or sales) o
---
 stock.65 Regulation D is not a resale
exemption. Stock sold under Regulation D cannot be resold unless the



   55. 17 C.F.R. § 230.501−.508 (2015).
   56. Id. § 230.144.
   57. Id. § 230.144A.
   58. Mark A. Sargent, The New Regulation D: Deregulation, Federalism and the
Dynamics o
---
 Regulatory Re
---
orm, 68 WASH. U. L.Q. 225, 227 (1990) (“The SEC
promulgated Regulation D in 1982 as part o
---
 a major e
---

---
ort to reduce regulatory
constraints on capital 
---
ormation—particularly by small business—to the greatest extent
compatible with investor protection.”).
   59. 15 U.S.C. § 77e (2012).
   60. Regulation D O
---

---
erings, U.S. SEC. & EXCHANGE COMMISSION, https://www.sec.gov/
answers/regd.htm (last visited Apr. 4, 2016).
   61. Rule 504 o
---
 Regulation D, U.S. SEC. & EXCHANGE COMMISSION, https://www.sec.
gov/answers/rule504.htm (last visited Apr. 4, 2016); see also Revision o
---
 Certain
Exemptions 
---
rom Registration 
---
or Transactions Involving Limited O
---

---
ers and Sales,
Securities Act Release No. 6389, 47 Fed. Reg. 11,251, 11,257−58 (Mar. 8, 1982).
   62. An “accredited investor” is an individual with at least $200,000 in annual income
or $1 million in net wealth, or a married couple with at least $300,000 in annual income.
17 C.F.R. § 230.501(a)(5)−(6) (“Accredited investor shall mean . . . [a]ny natural person
whose individual net worth, or joint net worth with that person’s spouse, exceeds
$1,000,000 . . . [or] [a]ny natural person who had an individual income in excess o
---

$200,000 in each o
---
 the two most recent years or joint income with that person’s spouse in
excess o
---
 $300,000 in each o
---
 those years and has a reasonable expectation o
---
 reaching the
same income level in the current year.”).
   63. Revision o
---
 Certain Exemptions 
---
rom Registration 
---
or Transactions Involving
Limited O
---

---
ers and Sales, 47 Fed. Reg. at 11,252.
   64. Id.
   65. 17 C.F.R. § 230.500(d).




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02_ORANBURG.DOCX                                                               1/20/17 1:45 PM




1026           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


stock is registered with the SEC or meets an exemption.66 The main
resale exemptions are Rule 144 and Rule 144A.67
    Rule 144 was originally adopted in 1972 to permit resale o
---

unregistered securities, but its ability to provide liquidity is
substantially     limited    by    holding-period   and     selling-volume
restrictions.68 To bene
---
it 
---
rom this non-exclusive sa
---
e harbor, resellers
originally had to hold the securities 
---
or at least two years prior to
resale, but in 1997 the SEC shortened the holding period to one year.69
The holding period begins when the purchase price o
---
 the shares are

---
ully paid,70 which means that stock options must be exercised and then
held 
---
or one year be
---
ore they can be resold under Rule 144.71 A
---
ter the
holding period is met, sellers can only sell up to one percent o
---
 the
company’s outstanding shares o
---
 that class o
---
 stock, or the average
reported weekly trading volume o
---
 the 
---
our preceding calendar weeks.72
Scholars have recognized that Rule 144 can only provide limited
liquidity because o
---
 its holding-period and selling-volume restrictions.73
Critically 
---
or present purposes, Rule 144’s holding period only permits
tacking between holders so long as sales are made privately,74 so this
rule is virtually useless 
---
or public-exchange transactions.
    Resale exemptions achieved their goal o
---
 reducing compliance costs
and making capital 
---
ormation more e
---

---
icient.75 Regulation D and Rule


   66. Id.
   67. Stephen J. Choi, Company Registration: Toward a Status-Based Anti
---
raud
Regime, 64 U. CHI. L. REV. 567, 638−39 (1997).
   68. See Notice o
---
 Adoption o
---
 Rule 144, Securities Act Release No. 5223, 37 Fed. Reg.
591 (Jan. 11, 1972).
   69. Revision o
---
 Holding Period Requirements in Rules 144 and 145, Securities Act
Release No. 7390, 62 Fed. Reg. 9242, 9242 (Feb. 28, 1997) (codi
---
ied at 17 C.F.R. pt. 230)
(“Today, 
---
or the 
---
irst time since the adoption o
---
 Rule 144 in 1972, the Commission is
adopting amendments to shorten the holding period that must be satis
---
ied be
---
ore limited
resales o
---
 restricted securities may be made by a
---

---
iliates and non-a
---

---
iliates in reliance
upon the rule.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
   70. 17 C.F.R. § 230.144(d)(1).
   71. Darian M. Ibrahim, The New Exit in Venture Capital, 65 VAND. L. REV. 1, 40
(2012) (“Rule 144 does not count the length o
---
 time that a stock option is held; rather, the
holding period begins when the option is actually exercised. Consequently, Rule 144 is not
available to resell recently exercised stock options.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
   72. 17 C.F.R. § 230.144(e)(1)(i)–(iii).
   73. E.g., Mira Ganor, Note, Improving the Legal Environment 
---
or Start-up Financing
by Rationalizing Rule 144, 33 WM. MITCHELL L. REV. 1447, 1451 (2007) (“Both the
holding-period restriction and the selling-volume restriction impair investor liquidity.”).
   74. See 17 C.F.R. § 230.144(d)(1).
   75. Revision o
---
 Holding Period Requirements in Rules 144 and 145, Securities Act
Release No. 7390, 62 Fed. Reg. 9242, 9243 (Feb. 28, 1997) (codi
---
ied at 17 C.F.R. pt. 230)
(“The Commission believes, and the public comments support the view, that reduction in
the Rule 144 holding periods will reduce compliance burdens and costs without signi
---
icant




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                         1027


144A proved to encourage venture capital 
---
ormation. Prior to the
Regulation D sa
---
e-harbor exemption, investment in private stock
totaled $18 billion in 1981.76 These “private placements” quickly
increased under Regulation D “to $139 billion in 1987 and then to $202
billion in 1988.”77 This success led the SEC to promulgate an additional
sa
---
e-harbor exemption, Rule 144A, which allows resale without any
holding period to a quali
---
ied institutional buyer (“QIB”).78 This resale
rule accelerated private placements, which exceeded $1.3 trillion in
2012.79 The dramatic increase in private-company investment 
---
ollowing
each successive exemption 
---
or private-stock resale highlights the
importance o
---
 a resale exemption—not just an original sale exemption—
to 
---
acilitate 
---
ormation o
---
 venture capital 
---
unds and their investment
into startups.
     These “exemptive” policies have proven that both original issuance
and resale sa
---
e harbors are necessary 
---
or private placements and,
there
---
ore, critical 
---
or startups and the entire venture capital industry.
But exempting companies 
---
rom making disclosures 
---
or the sake o
---

capital 
---
ormation is clearly at odds with the “sunlight” policies and their
goal o
---
 protecting investors by making in
---
ormation available to them.
The Supreme Court attempted to resolve this seemingly schizophrenic
approach to securities regulations in the seminal 1953 case SEC v.
Ralston Purina Co., which held that only sales to sophisticated
investors are not public o
---

---
erings and there
---
ore do not require



impact on investor protection. The Commission also believes that the action being taken
will promote market e
---

---
iciency, investment and capital 
---
ormation by reducing the liquidity
costs o
---
 holding restricted securities and reducing issuers’ cost o
---
 raising capital through
the sale o
---
 restricted securities.”).
   76. Roberta S. Karmel, Regulation by Exemption: The Changing De
---
inition o
---
 an
Accredited Investor, 39 RUTGERS L.J. 681, 689 (2008) (“A
---
ter Regulation D was passed, the
total amount o
---
 securities sold in private placements increased 
---
rom $18 billion in 1981 to
$139 billion in 1987 and then to $202 billion in 1988.”).
   77. Id.
   78. 17 C.F.R. § 230.144A(d). A QIB is an institution that has at least $100 million in
net investments. Id. § 230.144A(a)(1)(i) (“For purposes o
---
 this section, quali
---
ied
institutional buyer shall mean . . . [a]ny o
---
 the 
---
ollowing entities, acting 
---
or its own
account or the accounts o
---
 other quali
---
ied institutional buyers, that in the aggregate owns
and invests on a discretionary basis at least $100 million in securities o
---
 issuers that are
not a
---

---
iliated with the entity.”).
   79. Cheryl Conner, A Trillion Dollar Source o
---
 New Funding? The SEC’s New ‘Reg D,’
FORBES (July 13, 2013, 11:28 AM), http://www.
---
orbes.com/sites/cherylsnappconner/2013/
07/13/a-trillion-dollar-source-o
---
-new-
---
unding-the-secs-new-reg-d/#774ed1071
---
dd         (“The
existing ‘Reg D’ program exemption has already been responsible 
---
or more than $1.3
trillion in 
---
unding in 2012, and more than 37,000 Regulation D o
---

---
erings have been
executed since 2009.”).




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1028            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


mandatory public disclosures.80 SEC exemptions 
---
ollow the Ralston
Purina doctrine and permit only certain investors to participate in
private stock markets.
    The issuance exemptions in Regulation D and the resale exemption
in Rules 144 and 144A enabled modern venture capital 
---
inancing.81
Venture capital is where institutional investors make passive
investments in venture capital 
---
unds, which are run by venture capital
managers who make active investments in new business ventures.82
The venture capital market is o
---
ten regarded as the “crown jewel” o
---
 the
American economy.83 These new business ventures are colloquially
called “startups,” which generally re
---
ers to high-growth, high-risk,
early-stage businesses that are backed by venture capital 
---
inancing.84
Startups have historically developed in the Silicon Valley region o
---

Cali
---
ornia and 
---
ocused on high-tech projects. These regulations
achieved their purpose o
---
 exempting venture capital 
---
inancing 
---
rom
securities regulations.
    Venture capital 
---
inancing exemptions are based on the AI concept
as proxy 
---
or sophistication. The AI concept assumes that wealthier
investors have the knowledge and bargaining power to guarantee access
to appropriate in
---
ormation through contracting. Alternatively, the SEC
assumes that AIs can a
---

---
ord to lose their investment. An AI is an



   80. 346 U.S. 119, 125 (1953) (“[T]he applicability o
---
 § 4(1) should turn on whether the
particular class o
---
 persons a
---

---
ected need the protection o
---
 the Act. An o
---

---
ering to those who
are shown to be able to 
---
end 
---
or themselves is a transaction ‘not involving any public
o
---

---
ering.’”).
   81. See J OSEPH W. B ARTLETT , EQUITY FINANCE: VENTURE CAPITAL, BUYOUTS,
RESTRUCTURINGS AND REORGANIZATIONS § 14.12, at 342–49 (2d ed. 1995); Karmel, supra
note 76, at 689 (“As a result o
---
 Regulation D and Rule 144, the private placement market
in the United States grew quickly.”); Alan R. Palmiter, Toward Disclosure Choice in
Securities O
---

---
erings, 1999 COLUM. BUS. L. REV. 1, 90 n.250, 135 (“Easing the restrictions
on secondary distributions should have a bene
---
icial e
---

---
ect on primary o
---

---
erings,
particularly to venture capitalists who will want to sell a
---
ter a public o
---

---
ering.”).
   82. Ronald J. Gilson, Engineering a Venture Capital Market: Lessons 
---
rom the
American Experience, 55 STAN. L. REV. 1067, 1070 (2003) (“The typical transactional
pattern in the U.S. venture capital market is 
---
or institutional investors—pension 
---
unds,
banks, insurance companies, and endowments and 
---
oundations—to invest through
intermediaries, venture capital limited partnerships usually called ‘venture capital 
---
unds,’
in which the investors are passive limited partners.”).
   83. Id. at 1068 (“The venture capital market and 
---
irms whose creation and early
stages were 
---
inanced by venture capital are among the crown jewels o
---
 the American
economy.”).
   84. Darian M. Ibrahim, The (Not So) Puzzling Behavior o
---
 Angel Investors, 61 VAND.
L. REV. 1405, 1411−12 (2008) (“Start-ups have little or no operating history or tangible
assets with which to predict 
---
uture per
---
ormance, and scienti
---
ic or technological novelty
like that 
---
ound in the typical Silicon Valley start-up adds another layer o
---
 uncertainty.”).




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                       1029


individual with more than $1 million in net worth (excluding primary
residence) or more than $200,000 in annual income ($300,000 
---
or
married couples).85 This was a high threshold when the rule was
promulgated in 1982, but it has never been adjusted 
---
or in
---
lation, so the
threshold has much less signi
---
icance now. There were 9.63 million
households in America in 2013 with a net worth o
---
 $1 million or more.86
Consequently, the AI concept has come under scrutiny recently 
---
or

---
ailing to be a valid proxy 
---
or sophistication o
---
 investors.87
     Rule 144 and 144A are not up to the task o
---
 
---
acilitating smaller
resale transactions 
---
or retail investors. Rule 144 and 144A transactions
must be private, which requires the services o
---
 an investment banker,
lawyer, and/or registered broker-dealer. The transaction costs o
---
 Rule
144 and 144A transactions make small resale transactions
una
---

---
ordable. That means securities regulations may be encouraging
smaller investors to purchase stock 
---
rom original issuers, yet it is
locking them out o
---
 opportunities to resell those securities.

C.   The JOBS Act

    Congress recently passed groundbreaking legislation that is
designed to make it much easier 
---
or the general public to invest in
private companies. Title III o
---
 the JOBS Act amended the Securities Act
to allow a company to o
---

---
er and sell up to one million dollars worth o
---

equity securities (stock) in a twelve-month period to the general public
without registering the securities with the SEC.88 This new exemption
to registration under the Securities Act is called “crowd
---
unding.”89
    President Barack Obama made the normative goals o
---
 the JOBS Act
quite clear. At the bill’s signing, the President said: “These proposals


   85. See supra note 62.
   86. Emily Jane Fox, Number o
---
 U.S. Millionaires Hits New High, CNN MONEY (Mar.
14, 2014, 10:55 AM), http://money.cnn.com/2014/03/14/news/economy/us-millionaires-
households/ [http://perma.cc/53Y9-8XGW].
   87. Wallis K. Finger, Note, Unsophisticated Wealth: Reconsidering the SEC’s
“Accredited Investor” De
---
inition Under the 1933 Act, 86 WASH. U. L. REV. 733, 766 (2009)
(“Recent proposed revisions to the current accredited investor de
---
inition 
---
or natural
persons and the exponential growth o
---
 the hedge 
---
und industry make it clear that a
review o
---
 the accredited investor de
---
inition 
---
or natural persons is relevant and that
adjustments are necessary.”).
   88. Pub. L. No. 112-106, § 302, 126 Stat. 306, 315 (2012) (codi
---
ied as amended in
scattered sections o
---
 15 U.S.C.).
   89. See, e.g., Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act: Frequently Asked Questions About
Crowd
---
unding Intermediaries: Division o
---
 Trading and Markets, U.S. SEC. & EXCHANGE
COMMISSION (May 7, 2012), http://www.sec.gov/divisions/marketreg/tmjobsact-crowd

---
undingintermediaries
---
aq.htm [http:// perma.cc/TS3J-QUTY].




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1030           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


will help entrepreneurs raise the capital they need to put Americans
back to work and create an economy that’s built to last.”90 The
associated White House press release elaborated: “The JOBS Act will
allow Main Street small businesses and high-growth enterprises to
raise capital 
---
rom investors more e
---

---
iciently, allowing small and young

---
irms across the country to grow and hire 
---
aster.”91
    The JOBS Act stands in stark contrast to the Securities Act, the
Exchange Act, SOX, and Dodd-Frank because the JOBS Act is the only
securities statute to emphasize e
---

---
icient capital 
---
ormation above
investor protections. In 
---
act, critics o
---
 the law point out that the
legislative history o
---
 the JOBS Act “is bere
---
t o
---
 any evidence o
---
 serious
consideration o
---
 investor protection concerns.”92 As Pro
---
essor Robert
Thompson joked: “The JOBS Act is the biggest deregulatory statute in
the history o
---
 American securities regulation. That’s not a high barrier
to cross.”93
    The JOBS Act implicitly recognizes that sunlight, like many
disin
---
ectants, can kill desirable activity as well as undesirable activity.
Startups grow quickly in part because they are able to take risks that
public companies cannot take. Quarterly disclosures and annual
shareholder meetings give shareholders the incentive and the
opportunity to 
---
ire managers that do not turn a quarterly pro
---
it,94 but
startups can 
---
ocus on a long-term plan that may pay greater dividends
overall. Young startups o
---
ten operate in “stealth mode” because it can
be di
---

---
icult 
---
or young 
---
irms to protect their intellectual property.95 In

---
act, the JOBS Act expressly makes it much easier 
---
or startups to stay
private longer by raising the maximum private-company record-
shareholder limit 
---
rom 500 to 2000.96


   90. O
---

---
ice o
---
 the Press Sec’y, supra note 3.
   91. Id.
   92. Michael D. Guttentag, Protection 
---
rom What? Investor Protection and the JOBS
Act, 13 U.C. DAVIS BUS. L.J. 207, 253 (2013).
   93. Deregulating the Markets: The JOBS Act, 38 DEL. J. CORP. L. 476, 488 (2013)
(statement o
---
 Robert B. Thompson, Pro
---
essor o
---
 Business Law, Georgetown University
Law Center).
   94. See, e.g., Richi Jennings, Twitter Boss Costolo Says He Wasn’t Fired (but, Yeah, He
Was), COMPUTERWORLD (June 12, 2015, 3:25 AM), http://www.computerworld.com/
article/2934788/social-media/twitter-ceo-costolo-
---
ired-itbwcw.html (“Last week, one o
---
 the
company’s biggest shareholders and cheerleaders, Chris Sacca, publicly called 
---
or
change.”).
   95. Matt Villano, Why Startups Launch in ‘Stealth Mode’ and Others Don’t,
ENTREPRENEUR (Oct. 17, 2013), http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/229461 (“Operating
in stealth mode also can help protect intellectual property until launch.”).
   96. Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act Frequently Asked Questions: Changes to the
Requirements 
---
or Exchange Act Registration and Deregistration, U.S. SEC. & EXCHANGE




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1031


    Much has already been said about whether the JOBS Act mandates
su
---

---
icient “sunshine” disclosures to protect investors 
---
rom 
---
raud.97 Even
the SEC is concerned about whether it can provide su
---

---
icient investor
protections while complying with its congressional mandate to
implement the JOBS Act.98 This Article does not opine on whether the
JOBS Act, as it has been passed into law, should have prioritized
investor protections over capital 
---
ormation.
    Rather, this Article considers whether the JOBS Act can actually
achieve its purported goals: (1) democratizing access to capital 
---
or new
entrepreneurs in new geographies outside o
---
 Silicon Valley and
democratizing access to startup investments 
---
or new investors; (2)
creating jobs; and (3) growing the innovation economy.99 Part II next
discusses how the JOBS Act is likely to 
---
ail in these goals because it
does not account 
---
or unintended consequences o
---
 the staying private
trend.

                           PART II. PRIVATE PROBLEMS

    The private/public dichotomy is a hallmark o
---
 securities regulation.
Securities regulations categorize a company as private i
---
 it has not
registered its stock with the SEC.100 Registration brings the obligation


COMMISSION (Apr. 11, 2012), https://www.sec.gov/divisions/corp
---
in/guidance/c
---
jjobsact
---
aq-
12g.htm (“Title V and Title VI o
---
 the JOBS Act amend Section 12(g) and Section 15(d) o
---

the Exchange Act as 
---
ollows: The holders o
---
 record threshold 
---
or triggering Section 12(g)
registration 
---
or issuers (other than banks and bank holding companies) has been raised

---
rom 500 or more persons to either (1) 2000 or more persons or (2) 500 or more persons
who are not accredited investors.”). Many have speculated that exceeding the 500
shareholder limit is the reason Facebook went public. See, e.g., Steven Davido
---

---
 Solomon,
Facebook and the 500-Person Threshold, N.Y. TIMES: DEALBOOK (Jan. 3, 2011, 4:03 PM),
http://dealbook.nytimes.com/2011/01/03/
---
acebook-and-the-500-person-threshold/?_r=2.
   97. See, e.g., Thomas Lee Hazen, Crowd
---
unding or Fraud
---
unding? Social Networks
and the Securities Laws—Why the Specially Tailored Exemption Must Be Conditioned on
Meaning
---
ul Disclosure, 90 N.C. L. REV. 1735, 1739 (2012) (“This Article discusses the
importance o
---
 disclosure in any crowd
---
unding exemption and concludes that with the new
exemption, Congress has given the SEC the tools to implement a viable exemption
without unduly sacri
---
icing investor protection.”).
   98. See Luis A. Aguilar, Comm’r, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, Public Statement,
Investor Protection Is Needed 
---
or True Capital Formation: Views on the JOBS Act (Mar.
16, 2012), http://www.sec.gov/News/PublicStmt/Detail/PublicStmt/1365171490120 (“This
bill seems to impose tremendous costs and potential harm on investors with little to no
corresponding bene
---
it.”).
   99. See O
---

---
ice o
---
 the Press Sec’y, supra note 3.
  100. Ronald J. Gilson, A Structural Approach to Corporations: The Case Against
De
---
ensive Tactics in Tender O
---

---
ers, 33 STAN. L. REV. 819, 846 n.101 (1981) (“Where the
transaction involves the issuance o
---
 the o
---

---
eror’s securities, the o
---

---
er must be registered
with the Securities and Exchange Commission pursuant to the Securities Act o
---
 1933




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1032           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


to make periodic disclosures to the public and the opportunity to raise
money by selling stock in public markets. Startups traditionally sought
to “go public” by registering and having an initial public o
---

---
ering within
about seven years o
---
 
---
ormation because the venture capital 
---
unds that

---
inance startups are established with a ten-year term. The invested
money needs to be returned to the 
---
und investors when the term
expires.101 The ideal way 
---
or this money to be returned is when a
startup has an IPO, which is regarded as the “gold standard” in venture
capital success.102 The ten-year term limit on venture capital 
---
unds
drove startups to go public within that time 
---
rame.
     The IPO was the crowning event at the culmination o
---
 a process
known as the startup 
---
inancing cycle.103 This cycle begins with
incorporation and initial capitalization.104 Friends and 
---
amily provide a
small amount o
---
 initial 
---
unding. Angel investors provide most o
---
 the
initial capital.105 The startup begins operating at a loss. About hal
---
 o
---

the startups 
---
ail to earn pro
---
its; they go broke and liquidate.106 The
other hal
---
 manage to either generate revenues that cover costs107 or
secure venture capital 
---
inancing in an investment called the “Series
A.”108 Venture capital investors reinvest in the startup in later staged
investments called Series B, C, D, and so on.109 These investments are
illiquid. They are locked up in the startup until the startup exits the
private market ideally through an IPO (or sub-optimally through a
mergers and acquisitions (“M&A”) event) that allows the investors to
divest their investment.110


unless an exemption 
---
rom registration is available.”). See generally R. JENNINGS & H.
MARSH, SECURITIES REGULATION: CASES AND MATERIALS 464−95 (4th ed. 1977).
 101. Susan Pulliam & Jean Eaglesham, Investor Hazard: ‘Zombie Funds,’ WALL ST. J.
(May 31, 2012, 10:09 PM), http://www.wsj.com/articles/SB10001424052702304444604577
339843949806370.
 102. Ibrahim, supra note 71, at 11.
 103. DOUGLAS J. CUMMING & SOFIA A. JOHAN, VENTURE CAPITAL AND PRIVATE EQUITY
CONTRACTING: AN INTERNATIONAL PERSPECTIVE 5 (2d ed. 2014).
 104. Id.
 105. Andrew Wong, Mihir Bhatia & Zachary Freeman, Angel Finance: The Other
Venture Capital, 18 STRATEGIC CHANGE 221, 221–22 (2009). But see Laura Entis, Where
Startup Funding Really Comes From (In
---
ographic), ENTREPRENEUR (Nov. 20, 2013),
http://www.entrepreneur.com/article/230011 (“[P]ersonal loans and credit⎯along with
investments 
---
rom 
---
riends and 
---
amily⎯make up the lion’s share o
---
 
---
unding 
---
or startups in
the U.S.”).
 106. See R OBERT W ILTBANK & W ARREN B OEKER , RETURNS TO ANGEL INVESTORS IN
GROUPS 1 (2007), http://sites.kau
---

---
man.org/pd
---
/angel_groups_111207.pd
---
.
 107. This is called the “break even.” CUMMING & JOHAN, supra note 103, at 7 
---
ig.1.2.
 108. Id.
 109. Id.
 110. Id. at 592.




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                       1033


    It was once very rare 
---
or a privately 
---
unded startup to be worth
more than one billion dollars and rare 
---
or a startup to stay private 
---
or
long a
---
ter being valued at more than one billion dollars. The startup
worth more than one billion dollars was so rare it was called a
“Unicorn.”111 Startups, however, are not going public in an IPO or
liquidating in an M&A event. Increasingly, they are staying private.112
As o
---
 August 16, 2016, there are at least 170 so-called Unicorns, with a
cumulative valuation o
---
 over $620 billion.113 The biggest private
companies—like Uber, Airbnb, and Pinterest—are so large they
prompted the new coinage “Decacorn,” a private startup valued at over
$10 billion.114




 111. De
---
inition o
---
 Unicorn, INVESTOPEDIA, http://www.investopedia.com/terms/u/uni
corn.asp (last visited May 7, 2016).
 112. E.g., Yuliya Chernova, For Billion-Dollar Companies, Venture Deals Outstrip
Going Public, WALL ST. J. (Aug. 19, 2014, 2:40 PM), http://blogs.wsj.com/venturecapital/
2014/08/19/
---
or-billion-dollar-companies-venture-deals-outstrip-going-public/.
 113. The Unicorn List: Current Private Companies Valued at $1B and Above, CB
INSIGHTS, https://www.cbinsights.com/research-unicorn-companies (last visited Aug. 17,
2016).
 114. Sarah Frier & Eric Newcomer, The Fuzzy, Insane Math That’s Creating So Many
Billion-Dollar Tech Companies, BLOOMBERG TECH. (Mar. 17, 2015, 9:00 AM),
http://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2015-03-17/the-
---
uzzy-insane-math-that-s-creat
ing-so-many-billion-dollar-tech-companies (“But there are more than 50 [Unicorns] now.
There’s a new buzzword, ‘decacorn,’ 
---
or those over $10 billion, which includes Airbnb,
Dropbox, Pinterest, Snapchat, and Uber.”).




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1034           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


                                       Figure 1




   There are more private startup companies valued at over $1 billion
          (“Unicorns”) than elements on the periodic table.115


 115. The Periodic Table o
---
 Unicorns, CB INSIGHTS (June 16, 2015), https://www.cb
insights.com/blog/periodic-table-unicorns-list-companies-one-billion/ [https://perma.cc/39
ZS-C7NY].




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                              1035


    Staying private and growing extremely valuable is a new
phenomenon that a
---

---
ects all startup stakeholders, including investors,
employees, and society at large. This trend is the unintended
consequence o
---
 the securities regulations and market 
---
actors described
in Part I, the result o
---
 which is a large and growing gap between large
private 
---
inancing rounds and initial public o
---

---
erings.116 In other words,
startups are now able to stay private, yet access plenty o
---
 capital.
Staying private longer undermines many assumptions about private
securities.

                                    Figure 2




             Gap Between Private Deals and Public O
---

---
erings117

    The causes o
---
 the “staying private” trend are attributable to several

---
actors, including the increased expense o
---
 going public, the uncertainty
o
---
 greater regulatory costs in the 
---
uture 
---
or being public, the relatively
easy access to capital while staying private, the greater agility 
---
or a
non-disclosing company, management’s pre
---
erence 
---
or staying private,
increased public com
---
ort with private corporations, technology that



 116.   Chernova, supra note 112.
 117.   Id.




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1036            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313



---
acilitates investment in private companies, volatility in public markets,
access to overseas venture stock exchanges, and other 
---
actors. But the
e
---

---
ects o
---
 staying private are clear. Staying private creates new
problems 
---
or investors, employees, labor markets, and the economy. In
particular, staying private 
---
rustrates the 
---
undamental goals o
---
 a new
law that is designed to “democratize” startup investment and 
---
uel the
innovation economy.
    This Part will next identi
---
y and analyze three problems that
con
---
ound the JOBS Act’s stated goal o
---
 democratizing startup
investment. The 
---
irst and 
---
oundational problem is the emergence o
---

what this Article terms an “illiquidity discount asymmetry,”118 which
means that startup stock is worth substantially less when held by
employees and poorer investors, yet that exact same stock is worth
much more in the hands o
---
 upper management and the wealthiest
investors. This raises obvious 
---
airness concerns. It also 
---
rustrates the
JOBS Act by chilling venture investment by poorer investors.
    Second, the staying private trend creates a de 
---
acto non-compete
that locks employees to their companies and distorts the labor market.
The illiquidity discount asymmetry also devalues stock options, which
threatens to destroy the purpose o
---
 stock options to incentivize
employees to work harder 
---
or less salary. Startup culture is 
---
ueled by
the perception that employees are pari pasu with management in
taking on startup risk. The innovation economy is built upon
motivating employees this way, and that 
---
oundation is threatened by
the devaluation o
---
 increasingly illiquid stock options. In addition,

---
airness concerns are even stronger here than with investors because
startup employees—who traded o
---

---
 higher salary 
---
or more stock
options—do not receive the bene
---
it o
---
 that bargain when they 
---
ind that
they are holding worthless securities.
    Third, staying private threatens to curtain the innovation economy
and disrupt the entire startup 
---
inancing li
---
ecycle by inhibiting the
recycling o
---
 early stage investment capital. Additional systemic risks
arise where venture capitalists (“VCs”) can law
---
ully access liquidity
only in the types o
---
 unregulated markets that generally concern
scholars and regulators. The staying private trend has driven wealthy
investors to seek liquidity in unregulated dark pools where there is
documented opportunistic behavior—i.e., pushing domestic stock
transactions to o
---

---
shore stock markets, outside the auspices o
---
 SEC
regulation.



 118.   See in
---
ra Part II.A.




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2016]                DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                      1037


A. Illiquidity Discount Asymmetry

     Liquidity re
---
ers to the ability to buy or sell something. Something
that is hard to resell, or “illiquid,” is worth less than a similar thing
that is easy to resell because resale o
---
 an illiquid thing requires more
time, money, and risk. When illiquidity is the result o
---
 a trade
restriction like securities regulations, the extent o
---
 the marketability or
illiquidity discount is a 
---
unction o
---
 the trade restriction period. This is
true 
---
or securities such as stock and stock options, as illustrated in the

---
igure below, which shows that the longer a security must be held, the
less that security is worth.119

                                     Figure 3




     Illiquidity Discount as a Function o
---
 Trade Restriction Period120

    The un
---
ortunate truth o
---
 our securities regulations is that they
require poorer investors to hold private stock 
---
or longer than the
wealthiest investors. Laws 
---
urther restrict poorer investors’ access to
resale markets. This causes private stock to have a bigger illiquidity


 119. ASWATH DAMODARAN, MARKETABILITY AND VALUE: MEASURING THE ILLIQUIDITY
DISCOUNT 23 (2005), http://people.stern.nyu.edu/adamodar/pd
---
iles/papers/liquidity. pd
---

[http://perma.cc/Q58R-YCUE].
 120. Id. at 23 
---
ig.3.




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1038           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


discount and thus be less valuable in the hands o
---
 poorer investors than
in the hands o
---
 wealthier ones, who can access the resale market
quicker and easier. Ironically, this is the unintended consequence o
---

securities regulations that were designed to protect poorer investors,
yet those regulations have the actual e
---

---
ect o
---
 creating an illiquidity
discount asymmetry 
---
avoring wealthier investors over poorer ones.
    Securities regulations create the illiquidity discount asymmetry by
allowing large banks to host private stock markets 
---
or their QIBs, who
must have more than $100 million in net investments.121 Smaller
stockholders, and employees with stock options, are systematically
disadvantaged by Rule 144A, which creates the QIB restriction on
private-stock resale.122 The lack o
---
 an equal-access sa
---
e-harbor
exemption—such as the new Rule 144B that this Article proposes123—
harms poorer stockholders and employees disproportionately more than
it harms wealthier stockholders and management. And the lack o
---
 a
general solicitation provision keeps transactions o
---

---
 exchanges, so
trading mainly occurs in over-the-counter transactions in private stock
markets called “dark pools.”124
    Accordingly, Rule 144A—and the VC secondary exchange that it
allows—does not provide a 
---
ramework 
---
or a 
---
air, transparent, and liquid
market 
---
or companies that are staying private. SEC Commissioner Luis
A. Aguilar recently went on record stating that “[v]enture exchanges . . .
have 
---
ared poorly.”125 The Commissioner explained that venture
exchanges su
---

---
er 
---
rom low liquidity and high volatility.126 In Part III,


  121. See supra note 78.
  122. 17 C.F.R. § 230.144A (2015).
  123. See in
---
ra Part III.
  124. See supra note 9.
  125. Aguilar, supra note 15; see also Reena Aggarwal & James J. Angel, The Rise and
Fall o
---
 the Amex Emerging Company Marketplace, 53 J. FIN. ECON. 257, 257 (1999).
  126. Aguilar, supra note 15; see also SRIDHAR ARCOT, JULIA BLACK & GEOFFREY OWEN,
THE LONDON SCH. OF ECON. & POLITICAL SCI., FROM LOCAL TO GLOBAL: THE RISE OF AIM
AS A STOCK MARKET FOR GROWING COMPANIES 7 (2007), http://www.lse.ac.uk/intranet/
LSEServices/communications/pressAndIn
---
ormationO
---

---
ice/PDF/FULLREPORTAIM.pd
---

[http://perma.cc/2Y8Y-KX3Q] (“Liquidity among AIM stocks varies widely; stocks with the
highest capitalisation and the largest 
---
ree 
---
loat show liquidity levels that are comparable
to the Main Market, but at the lower end o
---
 the market there is a large number o
---
 illiquid
stocks.”); Aggarwal & Angel, supra note 125, at 264, 281; Aaron Hoddinott, TSX Venture
Exchange . . . Buy or Sell?, PINNACLE DIG. (Apr. 29, 2012), http://www.pinnacledigest.com/
blog/aaron-hoddinott/tsx-venture-exchangebuy-or-sell [http://perma.cc/596E-92GG] (“[T]he
TSX Venture has always been a boom/bust exchange. It’s extremely volatile. The
exchange has existed 
---
or 11 years and during that time, it has gone through 7 bear
markets o
---
 its own (market downturns o
---
 20% or more).”); Peter Koven, Can the Once-
Mighty TSX Venture Exchange Be Saved?, FIN. POST (Dec. 27, 2014), http://business.

---
inancialpost.com/investing/can-the-once-mighty-tsx-venture-exchange-be-saved?__lsa=




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                          1039


this Article responds to the SEC’s request 
---
or suggestions on the
development o
---
 a viable secondary trading environment 
---
or restricted
securities.127 This Part o
---
 this Article sets the 
---
oundation 
---
or those
suggestions by analyzing why our current securities regulation regime
does not provide the necessary liquidity. In short, Rule 144A’s sa
---
e
harbor provides liquidity only 
---
or QIBs, who are large institutions that
own over $100 million in net investments.128 It does not provide
liquidity to many other startup investors. Angels, who invest about
twenty-
---
ive billion dollars annually in startups,129 are generally
classi
---
ied as AIs.130 They need only have one million dollars in net
assets or $200,000 in annual income to purchase private-company
equities in the large Regulation D market.131 Wealthy angels and small
venture capital 
---
unds may also be classi
---
ied as quali
---
ied purchasers
(“QPs”),132 but even QPs with ninety-nine million dollars in net
investments cannot purchase equities on a 144A market.
    This disparity in access to a resale market means that AIs and QPs
have an “illiquidity discount”133 on their shares, while QIBs enjoy the


2516-3866 [http://perma.cc/8G7E-M7XR] (“Liquidity on most [TSX Venture] stocks is very
poor, which makes it di
---

---
icult 
---
or them to be bid anywhere but down.”).
  127. Aguilar, supra note 15 (“Ultimately, the goal is to develop a viable secondary
trading environment that promotes a 
---
air, transparent, and liquid market 
---
or the
securities o
---
 small businesses—a market in which investors can have con
---
idence that they
are being treated 
---
airly. There is no better way to protect investors’ interests, while
promoting the success
---
ul expansion o
---
 small businesses. I look 
---
orward to a robust
discussion on any and all viable suggestions as to how to improve the secondary trading
environment 
---
or shares o
---
 small business securities.”).
  128. See supra note 78.
  129. JEFFREY SOHL, CTR. FOR VENTURE RES., THE ANGEL INVESTOR MARKET IN 2014: A
MARKET CORRECTION IN DEAL SIZE (2015), https://paulcollege.unh.edu/sites/paulcollege.
unh.edu/
---
iles/web
---
orm/2014%20Analysis%20Report.pd
---
             [https://perma.cc/2TCE-JM62]
(“Total investments in 2014 were $24.1 billion, a decrease o
---
 2.8% over 2013 . . . .”).
  130. See supra note 62.
  131. See supra note 62; see also VLADIMIR IVANOV & SCOTT BAUGUESS, U.S. SEC. &
EXCH. COMM’N, CAPITAL RAISING IN THE U.S.: AN ANALYSIS OF UNREGISTERED OFFERINGS
USING THE REGULATION D EXEMPTION, 2009−2012 (2013), https://www.sec.gov/divisions/
risk
---
in/whitepapers/dera-unregistered-o
---

---
erings-reg-d.pd
---
       (“Capital    raised   through
Regulation D o
---

---
erings continues to be large—$863 billion reported in 2011 and $903
billion in 2012.”).
  132. 15 U.S.C. § 80a-2(51)(A) (2012) (“‘Quali
---
ied purchaser’ means (i) any natural
person . . . who owns not less than $5,000,000 in investments[;] . . . (ii) any company that
owns not less than $5,000,000 in investments and that is owned directly or indirectly by
or 
---
or 2 or more natural persons who are related[;] . . . (iv) any person, acting 
---
or its own
account or the accounts o
---
 other quali
---
ied purchasers, who in the aggregate owns and
invests on a discretionary basis, not less than $25,000,000 in investments.”).
  133. Spencer P. Patton, Note, Archangel Problems: The SEC and Corporate Liability,
92 TEX. L. REV. 1717, 1732 n.89 (2014) (“An illiquidity discount is a reduction in the price
o
---
 a security that must be made in order 
---
or the price to re
---
lect the 
---
act that the security




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1040            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313



---
ull value o
---
 their shares. In other words, the 144A regime makes
private-company stock most valuable to the wealthiest class o
---
 investor
and least valuable to the poorest class o
---
 investor. This problem will be
exacerbated when crowd
---
unding allows all people, even those who do
not quali
---
y as AIs, to invest in startups.

B. De Facto Non-Competes

    Stock options are a popular way 
---
or private startup companies to
pay employees. Employees generally have to work 
---
or a startup 
---
or 
---
our
years to be able to exercise all their stock options, whose value
increases i
---
 the company does well.134 This may align the interests o
---

employees, management, and investors, who otherwise would su
---

---
er

---
rom agency problems. Plus, this allows the cash-strapped startup to
use its capital 
---
or other purposes. Stock options are risky because a
private company (or its employee) may 
---
ail (or be terminated) in the

---
our years be
---
ore the options “vest” and can be exercised. Even when the
vested shares are exercised, the resulting shares have an illiquidity
discount because they generally cannot be resold until the company
goes public. The number o
---
 options that an employee receives is
inversely related to salary, and, as the 
---
igure below illustrates, the risk
o
---
 these options is inversely related to the proximity to the IPO.135




cannot be sold as easily as other securities.”).
 134. “The cheap common stock purchased by the 
---
ounders and management is o
---
ten
subject to an ownership vesting arrangement with the company. Typically, the stock vests
evenly over 
---
our or 
---
ive years.” Duncan M. Davidson, Common Law: Uncommon So
---
tware,
47 U. PITT. L. REV. 1037, 1049 (1986). “The evidence is that the managers o
---
ten exercise
their options as soon as they vest[—]i
---
 they are in the money . . . ; that the typical period
over which options vest is two to 
---
our years; and that companies 
---
requently grant
additional, later-vesting options during the original vesting period.” Je
---

---
rey N. Gordon,
Governance Failures o
---
 the Enron Board and the New In
---
ormation Order o
---
 Sarbanes-
Oxley, 35 CONN. L. REV. 1125, 1130 (2003). Typically, the stock is restricted and vests over
a 
---
our-year period. Victor Fleischer, Taxing Founders’ Stock, 59 UCLA L. REV. 60, 72
(2011).
 135. Johanna Schlegel, Understanding Your Options, SALARY.COM, http://www.salary.
com/advice/layouthtmls/advl_display_nocat_Ser56_Par123.html (last visited Apr. 6, 2016).




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                         1041


                                        Figure 4




  Inverse Relationship o
---
 Proximity to Going Public and Option Risk136

    As companies stay private longer, the employees’ option shares get
riskier as their illiquidity discount grows. In other words, stock options
become worthless as the startup stays private longer. Meanwhile,
management and VC investors do not su
---

---
er 
---
rom this problem because
they have other liquidity options. Staying private there
---
ore disrupts the
alignment between labor and management because management can
liquidate its investment through a 144A transaction on a VC secondary
market, while labor cannot. Labor may be 
---
orced to hold their equity
inde
---
initely. This threatens to undermine the value o
---
 stock options,
which have been called the “central pillar o
---
 innovation.”137


 136. Option Grant Practices in High-Tech Companies, PHOTONICS MEDIA, http://www.
photonics.com/Article.aspx?AID=28203 (last visited Apr. 6, 2016).
 137. Thomas A. Smith, The Zynga Clawback: Shoring Up the Central Pillar o
---

Innovation, 53 SANTA CLARA L. REV. 577, 581 (2013) (“A central pillar o
---
 Silicon Valley
business culture . . . is that ‘start-ups with limited cash and a risk o
---
 
---
ailure dangle the




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1042            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


    This problem came to light when 
---
rustrated Facebook employees
tried to sell their stock options on a new market called SharesPost.138
Un
---
ortunately, the employees were bamboozled by unscrupulous
traders, and the SEC shut down SharesPost.139 The alleged 
---
raud
occurred precisely because SharesPost was not an exchange that
executed transactions. To comply with securities regulations,
SharesPost 
---
unctioned like a bulletin board that connected buyers and
sellers who would then transact privately o
---

---
 the exchange.140 Mazzola
allegedly took advantage o
---
 the o
---

---
-exchange transactions by elevating
the Facebook stock price to include a 
---
ive percent secret commission and

---
alsely claimed to hold positions in other startup stock to attract
investors to their 
---
und.141 Facebook employees would not have been so
exposed to these 
---
raudsters i
---
 their stock was trading on an exchange
that provided transparency, price discovery, and oversight.
    Without a secondary market like SharesPost on which to sell their
equity, labor has to wait until management elects to do an IPO or M&A,
which they may choose to never do because management has a third
option 
---
or liquidation through a VC secondary market. In other words,
employees who traded higher salaries 
---
or stock options on the premise
that “we’re all in this together”142 were misled, which is simply un
---
air. A
2013 survey realized that seventy-one percent o
---
 employee stock options
become liquid only at a value-realizing event (like an IPO or M&A).143




possibility o
---
 stock riches in order to lure talent.’”).
  138. It is understandable that the ordinary people who work at success
---
ul startup
companies like Facebook (as opposed to venture capital 
---
und managers) want their 
---
air
share o
---
 the company’s success, and ordinary people cannot always a
---

---
ord to wait until a
company goes public to get the cash they need to buy a house, send a child to college, or
pay o
---

---
 credit card bills.
  139. See Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Announces Charges 
---
rom
Investigation o
---
 Secondary Market Trading o
---
 Private Company Shares (Mar. 14, 2012),
http://www.sec.gov/News/PressRelease/Detail/PressRelease/1365171487740.
  140. SecondMarket and SharesPost: The New Market, ECONINTERSECT.COM (Jan. 23,
2011), http://econintersect.com/b2evolution/blog1.php/2011/01/23/secondmarket-and-shar
espost-the-new-market (“SharesPost operates under a di
---

---
erent business model as a
‘passive bulletin board’ within the meaning established by the SEC in certain No-Action
letters.”).
  141. Complaint ¶¶ 1, 19, SEC v. Mazzola, No. CV-12-1258 (N.D. Cal. Mar. 14, 2012),
2012 WL 836186, at *1, *6.
  142. PAUL OYER, STAN. INST. ECON. POL’Y RES., STOCK OPTIONS—IT’S NOT JUST ABOUT
MOTIVATION (2002),          http://web.stan
---
ord.edu/group/siepr/cgi-bin/siepr/?q=system/
---
iles/
shared/pubs/papers/brie
---
s/policybrie
---
_oct02.pd
---
.
  143. WORLDATWORK & VIVIENT CONSULTING, INCENTIVE PAY PRACTICES SURVEY:
PRIVATELY HELD COMPANIES 10 (2014), http://www.worldatwork.org/waw/adimLink?id=
74765.




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                         1043


But management and VC investors can, and do, obtain liquidity much
earlier.
    This is not just a huge burden 
---
or individual employees. It also
distorts the labor market by tying employees to their employers beyond
what they bargained 
---
or. Startup employees understand that they

---
or
---
eit their stock options i
---
 they quit be
---
ore the stock vests. But tax law
mandates that employees must purchase their stock options within
ninety days o
---
 leaving their employer.144 Private-company employees do
not always have the cash to exercise their options, and it is hard to
borrow cash to exercise shares that cannot be resold or used as
collateral. There
---
ore, employees who quit without the cash to buy out
the stock options in a private company 
---
or
---
eit their equity position,
which means they have worked 
---
or below-market cash compensation.145
Management, which has access to other liquidity options on the VC
secondary markets, can e
---

---
ectively claw back the option grants to labor
through attrition. This incentivizes employees to stay with 
---
irms longer
than they otherwise would and, there
---
ore, may be the source o
---
 a labor-
market distortion.146
    The labor-market distortion cannot be solved by private ordering
because stock option contracts are, like all complex contracts,
incomplete.147 Common stock contracts are deliberately incomplete: it is


 144. I.R.C. § 422 (2012). The ninety-day rule is one o
---
 several 
---
eatures a stock option
must have to quali
---
y as an incentive stock option (“ISO”), and “the ISO rules provide
additional employee-level bene
---
its.” David I. Walker, Is Equity Compensation Tax
Advantaged?, 84 B.U. L. REV. 695, 712 (2004).
 145. While it is commonly understood that employees will 
---
or
---
eit their stock options i
---

they quit be
---
ore the options vest, this Article goes 
---
urther and suggests that employees

---
or
---
eit even vested stock options i
---
 they lack the cash to exercise them upon their
termination. For the conventional understanding o
---
 how stock options are designed to
encourage employees to share risk with the 
---
irm, see Curtis J. Milhaupt, The Market 
---
or
Innovation in the United States and Japan: Venture Capital and the Comparative
Corporate Governance Debate, 91 NW. U. L. REV. 865, 887 (1997) (“Because the stock
options vest over time, i
---
 key employees are terminated or quit, they will have worked 
---
or
below-market monetary compensation while 
---
or
---
eiting their equity stake in the venture.”)
and William A. Sahlman, Insights 
---
rom the Venture Capital Model o
---
 Project Governance,
29 BUS. ECON. 35, 36 (1994) (“The vesting requirement means that i
---
 employees are
terminated, they will likely lose their stock. In most cases, they will have worked 
---
or
below-market cash compensation, and they will 
---
or
---
eit their equity position.”).
 146. See BRUCE BRUMBERG, THE STOCK OPTION TAX DILEMMA FACED BY PRE-IPO
COMPANY EMPLOYEES (2012), https://sharespost.com/site/assets/
---
iles/3071/the_stock_
option_tax_dilemma_
---
aced_by_pre-ipo_company_employeess.pd
---
 [https://perma.cc/NXH2-
UFUK].
 147. There is a robust discussion in the literature about incomplete common stock
contracts. See, e.g., William W. Bratton & Michael L. Wachter, A Theory o
---
 Pre
---
erred
Stock, 161 U. PA. L. REV. 1815, 1839 (2013) (“Since stockholder interests are so broad as to
be non-contractible, incomplete transactions are inevitable, and there
---
ore make 
---
iduciary




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1044           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


more e
---

---
icient to deal with certain issues only when they arise because
the huge set o
---
 possible contingencies 
---
or residual claimants “make[s] ex
ante contractual speci
---
ication un
---
easible.”148 To the extent that common
stock contracts are incomplete, stock option contracts are even more
incomplete because they introduce the additional layer o
---
 an option
contract on top o
---
 the common stock contract. Incomplete stock option
contracts do not necessarily account 
---
or the possibility that the interests
o
---
 management and option-holders diverge on whether to have a
liquidity event, and there is no corporate law backdrop to address this
problem with de
---
ault rules.

C. Systemic Risks

    Staying private creates three substantial and systemic risks. First,
an IPO or other liquidity event liberates capital to be deployed in new
ventures. While VCs are able to obtain some liquidity in today’s
secondary markets, many VC investments cannot be completely or even
partially cashed out without a liquidity event.149 Without cashing out,
VCs there
---
ore cannot reinvest in new companies, and the startup

---
inancing cycle shuts down. Second, without IPOs or a robust and liquid
stock exchange on which to trade, VCs must sell these stocks in o
---

---
-
exchange environments similar to so-called “dark pools.” These low-
in
---
ormation environments create opportunity 
---
or bad behavior and
pre
---
erential treatment, which have been the subject o
---
 recent SEC
indictments.150 Third, startups that need greater liquidity 
---
or their
shareholders than SharesPost-style secondary markets or dark pools
can list their stock on 
---
oreign “venture exchanges” in Canada, Europe,
and South America.151 American investors in these 
---
oreign-listed


protection necessary.”).
 148. Id. (“Protecting that reliance with 
---
iduciary principles is thought to be more
e
---

---
icient than 
---
orcing common stock investors to speci
---
y their rights ex ante. Indeed, the
set o
---
 possible contingencies 
---
or the common is so large as to make ex ante contractual
speci
---
ication un
---
easible.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
 149. See sources cited supra note 126; see also Aggarwal & Angel, supra note 125, at
281 (noting that European venture exchanges “su
---

---
ered 
---
rom severe illiquidity”).
 150. Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Charges New York-Based Dark
Pool Operator with Failing to Sa
---
eguard Con
---
idential Trading In
---
ormation (June 6, 2014),
https://www.sec.gov/News/PressRelease/Detail/PressRelease/1370542011574             (“The
Securities and Exchange Commission today charged a New York-based brokerage 
---
irm
that operates a dark pool alternative trading system with improperly using subscribers’
con
---
idential trading in
---
ormation in marketing its services.”).
 151. John C. Co
---

---
ee, Jr., The Future as History: The Prospects 
---
or Global Convergence in
Corporate Governance and Its Implications, 93 NW. U. L. REV. 641, 673 (1999) (“[F]irms
seeking any o
---
 a variety o
---
 goals—to raise equity capital, to increase share value, or to




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1045


startups, and domestic employees who received stock options in lieu o
---

salary, cannot be e
---

---
ectively protected by domestic regulators like the
SEC and the Department o
---
 Justice. This is particularly disconcerting
because many o
---
 these 
---
oreign exchanges have been described as the
“Wild West,” and they are prone to spectacular 
---
ailure.152

     1.   Breaking the Startup Financing Cycle

     Staying private threatens to disrupt the entire startup 
---
inancing
li
---
ecycle by inhibiting the recycling o
---
 early stage investment capital
into new venture. Pro
---
essor Je
---

---
 Schwartz explained in his article, The
Twilight o
---
 Equity Liquidity, that the 
---
ailure o
---
 U.S. equity markets to
o
---

---
er a stock exchange 
---
or young companies mani
---
ests in “a less robust
entrepreneurial ecosystem and weaker equity markets.”153 He
recognized that the innovation economy relies on a steady 
---
low o
---

capital that VCs provide by exiting success
---
ul older startups and
investing in younger ones.154 Furthermore, IPOs are the gold standard
in startup exits 
---
or VC liquidity.155 M&A events (which Schwartz calls
“trade sales”)156 do not o
---

---
er complete liquidity because a company’s
acquisitions are o
---
ten paid 
---
or with a mix o
---
 cash and stock.157 I
---
 the
acquirer is also a private company, then the target company’s
stockholders end up still holding restricted private stock.158 From a
broader economic perspective, M&A exits may be in
---
erior to IPO exits
because acquisitions may destroy jobs, whereas IPOs create jobs.159


make acquisitions 
---
or stock—may decide to list on a 
---
oreign stock exchange and thereby
opt into 
---
oreign governance standards.”).
  152. Aggarwal & Angel, supra note 125, at 258 (noting the “many 
---
ailed attempts to
launch public equity markets 
---
or small stocks in the US and Europe”).
  153. Je
---

---
 Schwartz, The Twilight o
---
 Equity Liquidity, 34 CARDOZO L. REV. 531, 533
(2012).
  154. Id. at 541 (“This cycle o
---
 
---
irms impacts equity markets. In the short term, i
---
 new

---
irms are not added, an equity market loses its vitality. Since established 
---
irms tend to
have lower growth, i
---
 yesterday’s companies are the only ones on a market, it stagnates.
The story worsens in the long term. Over time, without new 
---
irms joining its ranks, a once
robust equity market will eventually 
---
ade away. Worse yet, i
---
 U.S. equity markets as a
whole become unattractive, they will collectively languish and decay.”).
  155. Ibrahim, supra note 71, at 11.
  156. Schwartz, supra note 153, at 541−42.
  157. See, e.g., Roberta Romano, A Guide to Takeovers: Theory, Evidence, and
Regulation, 9 YALE J. ON REG. 119, 123 n.11 (1992) (“[W]hen a bidder thinks its stock is
overvalued, it uses stock rather than cash 
---
or the acquisition . . . .”).
  158. Schwartz, supra note 153, at 541–42; see also JOHN HAWKEY, EXIT STRATEGY
PLANNING: GROOMING YOUR BUSINESS FOR SALE OR SUCCESSION 171–82 (2002)
(discussing trade sales).
  159. Schwartz, supra note 153, at 542 (“In addition, a trade-sale undermines job-




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1046            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


    In other words, Pro
---
essor Schwartz analyzed alternative sources o
---

liquidity and 
---
ound that the markets 
---
or private shares “have little to
o
---

---
er.”160 Secondary markets built on section 4(1½) o
---
 the Securities
Act,161 Rule 144,162 and Rule 144A163 do not provide the certainty,

---
lexibility, and reliability that markets need to 
---
unction properly. In

---
act, 92.7% o
---
 VCs polled in 2009 were either “worried” or “most
worried” about the uncertain state o
---
 exit markets.164 Without well-

---
unctioning exit markets, the VC 
---
unds that have been 
---
ueling the
innovation economy will eventually dry up.




creation. I
---
 an entrepreneurial 
---
irm is simply merged into another, job growth is stymied.
In 
---
act, in the short term, jobs are likely lost as redundant employees are eliminated.
IPOs create jobs; trade-sales kill them.”).
  160. Id. at 551.
  161. Id. at 553 (“Essentially, the rule 
---
or section 4(1½) is that a resale to a limited
number o
---
 sophisticated and in
---
ormed investors, with whom the seller has a preexisting
relationship, who themselves do not intend to 
---
lip the stock, is permissible, so long as the
seller held the shares 
---
or a su
---

---
icient amount o
---
 time. As the ambiguity o
---
 the language
suggests, the boundaries o
---
 these criteria are hazy. Such haziness means that this rule is
ill-suited to serve as the 
---
oundation 
---
or a liquid market.” (
---
ootnotes omitted)).
  162. Id. at 555 (“Rule 144 poses a number o
---
 theoretical and practical problems.
Looking 
---
irst at the regulation o
---
 nona
---

---
iliate transactions, the one-year rule poses the
same concerns as the three-year rule under the 4(1½) doctrine. It lays the groundwork 
---
or
an unregulated marketplace in the resale o
---
 private securities once the holding period is
complete. Again, this runs counter to the overriding investor-protection purpose o
---

securities law and chills liquidity.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
  163. Id. at 561–62 (“Although the rule and this ambition apply to unregistered
securities more broadly, its use in connection with shares o
---
 private U.S. issuers is all that
matters here. With respect to this type o
---
 security, the rule’s impact has been muted. For
a great while, there were no markets speci
---
ically designed to 
---
acilitate transactions 
---
or
such shares under 144A. This changed with the launch o
---
 several new trading venues a

---
ew years ago, but these plat
---
orms have met with little success.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
  164. Scott Austin, Majority o
---
 VCs in Survey Call Industry ‘Broken,’ WALL ST. J. (June
29, 2009, 4:38 PM), http://blogs.wsj.com/venturecapital/2009/06/29/majority-o
---
-vcs-in-sur
vey-call-industry-broken/.




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                      1047


                                     Figure 5




 The Start-Up Financing Timeline illustrates the path venture-
---
unding
startups traditionally took 
---
rom initial private 
---
inancing to initial public
                                 o
---

---
ering.

        2.   Trading in Unregulated Dark Pools

    This Subpart explains how the problems with trading public-
company stock in private dark-pool markets also apply to private-
company stock that is traded in similarly “dark” markets. Dark pools
are private stock markets that are not accessible by the general
investing public.165 In 
---
act, dark pools are designed so institutions can
hide their orders 
---
rom the marketplace.166 Many scholars have
expressed serious concerns that this “shadow banking system” creates
dangerous systemic risks.167 Dark pool transactions are secret, one-o
---

---
,




 165.    See supra note 9.
 166.   BRIAN R. BROWN, CHASING THE SAME SIGNALS: HOW BLACK-BOX TRADING
INFLUENCES STOCK MARKETS FROM WALL STREET TO SHANGHAI 116 (2010).
 167. See, e.g., Frank Pasquale, Restoring Transparency to Automated Authority, 9 J. ON
TELECOMM. & HIGH TECH. L. 235, 252 (2011) (“Though the rise o
---
 the ‘shadow banking
system’ and ‘dark pools’ may make its spread inevitable, trade secrecy appears
inappropriate when a Gordian knot o
---
 gambles can put the entire global 
---
inancial system
at risk.”).




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1048           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


idiosyncratic deals that do not reveal a market price.168 They reduce
liquidity in exchanges, making retail investment less e
---

---
icient,169 and
raise transparency concerns.170 The use o
---
 dark pools to trade public-
company stock is growing rapidly.171

                                        Figure 6




  More transactions are happening o
---

---
 exchanges, in dark pools housed
                          inside big banks.172




  168. Robert Hatch, Re
---
orming the Murky Depths o
---
 Wall Street: Putting the Spotlight
on the Security and Exchange Commission’s Regulatory Proposal Concerning Dark Pools
o
---
 Liquidity, 78 GEO. WASH. L. REV. 1032, 1039 (2010) (“[C]ritics worried that by hiding
in
---
ormation 
---
rom the public at large, the activity in dark pools would harm the validity o
---

public price quotes by making it di
---

---
icult 
---
or investors to know i
---
 they were getting either
the best price or the appropriate price 
---
or their transactions.”).
  169. Id. (“[C]ritics worried that the lure o
---
 higher prices in dark pools would suck
liquidity out o
---
 conventional exchanges, making it harder and more expensive 
---
or retail
investors to conduct trades.”).
  170. Michael C. Schouten, The Case 
---
or Mandatory Ownership Disclosure, 15 STAN. J.L.
BUS. & FIN. 127, 142 n.64 (2009) (“Not surprisingly, dark pools are increasingly raising
transparency concerns.”).
  171. William A. Birdthistle & M. Todd Henderson, Becoming a Fi
---
th Branch, 99
CORNELL L. REV. 1, 68 (2013) (“There is a growing phenomenon o
---
 securities being traded
in so-called dark pools.”).
  172. Sam Mamudi, Dark Pools: Private Stock Trading vs. Public Exchanges,
BLOOMBERG QUICKTAKE, http://www.bloombergview.com/quicktake/dark-pools (last
updated Feb. 1, 2016).




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1049


    The private stock market is 
---
ragmented into approximately 
---
i
---
ty
individual marketplaces, commonly called “dark pools,” that are owned
and operated by the world’s largest banks.173 The percentage o
---
 stock
trades that happen in private dark pools, not on public stock markets, is
rising sharply, as the 
---
igure above illustrates.174 Critics argue that
higher dark-pool trading results in lower market quality, including
more volatility, lower liquidity, and rampant opportunism.175
Wrongdoing is clearly occurring in dark pools. Despite di
---

---
iculty policing
these secret trading environments, SEC investigations have 
---
ound
massive banks like UBS privileging certain market participants over
others.176
    The Rule 144A venture stock resale market is really just a series o
---

transactions in small, 
---
ragmented markets which are very similar to
what are traditionally re
---
erred to as dark pools. These 144A resales are
virtually invisible to regulators like the SEC.177 Market participants
cannot learn the price o
---
 securities traded in dark pools because there is
no price disclosure mechanism. The price disclosure problem is more
pronounced in private-stock markets because there is no public-
exchange price to help determine the private-market price. This is
particularly harm
---
ul to employees and smaller investors who have less
access to private bankers, valuation 
---
irms, or other sources o
---

in
---
ormation that can help value private securities.
    Dark pools and other over-the-counter (o
---

---
-market) transactions are
a predictable consequence o
---
 inadequate markets. Even though these
markets have high transaction 
---
ees, limited ability to provide price
discovery, hard-to-detect opportunism, and other disadvantages,178 they



  173. Robert Lenzner, Dark Pools Fragment the Stock Market into 50 Private Stock
Markets, FORBES: INV. (June 27, 2014, 12:08 PM), http://www.
---
orbes.com/sites/
robertlenzner/2014/06/27/dark-pools-
---
ragment-the-stock-market-into-50-private-stock-
markets/.
  174. Mamudi, supra note 172.
  175. See, e.g., Memorandum 
---
rom Cristie L. March, Senior Adviser, O
---

---
ice o
---
 the
Chairman to File No. S7-02-10 (Apr. 10, 2013), http://www.sec.gov/comments/s7-02-
10/s70210-396.pd
---
 [http://perma.cc/GR33-L7W3].
  176. Press Release, U.S. Sec. & Exch. Comm’n, SEC Charges UBS Subsidiary with
Disclosure Violations and Other Regulatory Failures in Operating Dark Pool (Jan. 15,
2015), http://www.sec.gov/news/pressrelease/2015-7.html (“An SEC examination and
investigation o
---
 UBS revealed that the 
---
irm 
---
ailed to properly disclose to all subscribers
the existence o
---
 an order type that it pitched almost exclusively to market makers and
high-
---
requency trading 
---
irms.”).
  177. BROWN, supra note 166, at 116 (“A dark pool is an anonymous crossing network
that allows institutions to hide their orders 
---
rom the marketplace.”).
  178. The Congressional Research Service’s report, Dark Pools in Equity Trading, lists

---
ive regulatory concerns: market 
---
ragmentation, 
---
airness and access, price manipulation,




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1050           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


are growing        because      they    remain      better    than     any    available
alternatives.

     3.   Trading in O
---

---
shore Stock Markets

    I
---
 they do not want to transact in dark pools, QIBs can convince
management to list their stock on a 
---
oreign “venture exchange,” such as
the Alternative Investment Market (“AIM”) in London. When stock is
traded o
---

---
shore, the SEC cannot protect American investors. These
venture exchanges have been described as “a market 
---
or lemons”179 and
the “Wild West”180 by scholars and regulators. This sort o
---
 international
“regulatory dualism”181 or “regulatory arbitrage”182 diminishes the
e
---

---
ectiveness o
---
 any domestic regime. Moreover, empirical studies have
shown that listing outside the United States diminishes shareholder
value.183 This is particularly problematic here, where the largest and
wealthiest investors can obtain liquidity by listing outside the United
States at the expense o
---
 smaller and poorer investors and employees


improper trade, and lack o
---
 price discovery. GARY SHORTER & RENA S. MILLER, CONG.
RESEARCH SERV., R43739, DARK POOLS IN EQUITY TRADING: POLICY CONCERNS AND
RECENT DEVELOPMENTS 6−8 (2014), https://www.
---
as.org/sgp/crs/misc/R43739.pd
---
.
  179. Cécile Carpentier & Jean-Marc Suret, Entrepreneurial Equity Financing and
Securities Regulation: An Empirical Analysis, 30 INT’L SMALL BUS. J. 41, 41 (2010) (“The
quality o
---
 
---
irms, their post-listing operating per
---
ormance and strategy, and their 
---
ate
largely support the opinion that strong listing requirements are essential to prevent the
emergence o
---
 a lemon market.”).
  180. Aguilar, supra note 15 (“Scandals involving some ECM companies only cemented
the exchange’s reputation as a lawless Wild West.”).
  181. Ronald J. Gilson, Henry Hansmann & Mariana Pargendler, Regulatory Dualism
as a Development Strategy: Corporate Re
---
orm in Brazil, the United States, and the
European Union, 63 STAN. L. REV. 475, 478 (2011) (“Regulatory dualism seeks to avoid, or
at least mitigate, the Olson problem by permitting the existing business elite to be
governed by the prere
---
orm regime, while pursuing development by allowing other
businesses to be governed by a re
---
ormed regime. Put in terms o
---
 capital market and
shareholder protection, regulatory dualism establishes a new and more rigorous
shareholder protection regime, operating parallel to the existing one, that is open to any
new or existing 
---
irm that wishes to make use o
---
 it.”).
  182. Amir N. Licht, Regulatory Arbitrage 
---
or Real: International Securities Regulation
in a World o
---
 Interacting Securities Markets, 38 VA. J. INT’L L. 563, 567 (1998)
(“Regulatory arbitrage traditionally indicates a phenomenon whereby regulated entities
migrate to jurisdictions imposing lower regulatory burdens. By doing so they exert a
downward pressure on those jurisdictions that want to retain the regulated activity
within their borders.”).
  183. Id. at 634 (“Notwithstanding the above, a certain amount o
---
 support may be 
---
ound
in the results o
---
 expected returns tests o
---
 
---
oreign listings incoming to the United States
versus those outgoing 
---
rom the United States. As a broad generalization, the 
---
ormer
systematically tend to increase shareholder value whereas the latter tend to do the
opposite and exhibit negative abnormal returns.”).




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                           1051


who cannot access those markets and whose shares also have an
illiquidity discount.184
     Listing on o
---

---
shore stock markets also creates a number o
---
 problems

---
or the issuing company. The most signi
---
icant problem is the massive
transaction costs that a U.S. company will spend to list on a 
---
oreign
stock exchange in order to understand and comply with 
---
oreign
regulatory regimes.185 Furthermore, this solution exacerbates the
illiquidity discount asymmetry problem because it is more di
---

---
icult 
---
or
smaller stockholders to 
---
ind an international broker willing to sell just a

---
ew shares on a 
---
oreign stock exchange than it is 
---
or a larger
stockholder to 
---
ind a broker willing to make a large block sale.186

           PART III. DEMOCRATIZING PRIVATE STOCK EXCHANGES

    New securities regulations unintentionally encourage startups to
stay private. Staying private creates a number o
---
 problems that hurt
smaller investors, devalue employee stock options, create systemic
risks, and threaten to break the startup 
---
inancing cycle. One solution
could be to reverse these new securities regulations. Many scholars
have advanced the position that SOX and Dodd-Frank are bad laws,187
but as one o
---
 SOX’s most 
---
ervent critics points out, “[c]ongressional
repeal o
---
 SOX’s corporate governance mandates is not on the near-term
political horizon.”188
    Moreover, SOX and Dodd-Frank are not the only reasons why
companies are staying private. Even be
---
ore SOX and Dodd-Frank, going


 184. See Schwartz, supra note 153, at 543 (“[F]orcing U.S. investors to look abroad 
---
or
U.S. companies undermines investor protection.”).
 185. Id. at 542 (“The key issue is that going overseas involves signi
---
icant transaction
costs.”).
 186. Steven M. Davido
---

---
, Regulating Listings in a Global Market, 86 N.C. L. REV. 89,
136–37 (2007).
 187. See, e.g., Bainbridge, supra note 53, at 1821 (“Like their predecessors in SOX, the
six key corporate governance provisions o
---
 Dodd-Frank satis
---
y the key criteria o
---
 quack
corporate governance.”); Kristin N. Johnson, Things Fall Apart: Regulating the Credit
De
---
ault Swap Commons, 82 U. COLO. L. REV. 167, 242 (2011) (“[T]he Dodd-Frank Act
leaves much to be desired.”); Ribstein, supra note 37, at 3 (“Post-Enron re
---
orms, including
Sarbanes-Oxley, rely on increased monitoring by independent directors, auditors, and
regulators who have both weak incentives and low-level access to in
---
ormation. This
monitoring has not been, and cannot be, an e
---

---
ective way to deal with 
---
raud by highly
motivated insiders. Moreover, the laws are likely to have signi
---
icant costs . . . .”); Romano,
supra note 53, at 1602 (“An extensive empirical literature suggests that those mandates
were seriously misconceived, because they are not likely to improve audit quality or
otherwise enhance 
---
irm per
---
ormance and thereby bene
---
it investors as Congress
intended.”).
 188. Romano, supra note 53, at 1602.




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1052           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


public was expensive not just once but on an on-going basis to comply
with the Securities Act and the Exchange Act. In addition to the cost o
---

complying with those laws, going public also risks subjecting the
company and its management to whatever additional regulations
Congress demands a
---
ter the next crisis. Staying private also o
---

---
ers
many bene
---
its. Private-company managers have more 
---
reedom and less
liability.189 VCs get protected access to a rare and valuable class o
---

assets. Private startups have more 
---
lexibility with pricing their
employee stock options. And there is a certain allure to being private
that is ameliorated when securities regulations require a public
company to “open the kimono” at least every three months.
    This Article there
---
ore does not recommend a reactionary response to
securities laws. Indeed, in other work I argue that crowd
---
unding is
inherently di
---

---
erent 
---
rom traditional 
---
undraising, and so it requires
progressive new approaches.190 Rather, this Part proposes a new sa
---
e-
harbor exemption that allows 
---
or domestic private stock exchanges to

---
acilitate transactions o
---
 private-company stock. Such a rule would have
three primary bene
---
its. First, it would give employees access to a
domestic venture exchange that is transparent, liquid, and 
---
air. Second,
it would encourage QIBs to transact on venture exchanges instead o
---
 in
unregulated dark pools. Third, it would move transactions 
---
rom o
---

---
shore
locations to American soil, where the lemons and Wild West problems
can be mitigated by SEC oversight.
    This Article also acknowledges that a domestic “venture exchange”
could be problematic by creating an environment where investors can
trade stock about which they have no good in
---
ormation. This problem is
exacerbated where investors only have a small stake in each company
and there
---
ore are “rationally apathetic” about monitoring their
investment. Fortunately, this problem can be addressed. In public
markets, rational apathy is countered somewhat by analysts whose
pro
---
ession is to monitor and report on public companies. This
distributes the cost o
---
 monitoring across all investors who purchase the
report. The problem in venture exchanges—and in small-cap public-
company stocks—is the lack o
---
 analyst coverage on listed companies.



 189. Consider, 
---
or example, how Twitter CEO Dick Costolo was 
---
orced to retire by
shareholders who were upset that Twitter was not growing revenue 
---
ast enough. Erin
Gri
---

---
ith, Where Did Dick Costolo Go Wrong?, FORTUNE (June 12, 2015, 6:44 AM),
http://
---
ortune.com/2015/06/12/twitter-ceo-dick-costolo-resigns/. When the company was
private, Costolo was subject only to scrutiny by a 
---
ew VCs and 
---
ounder Jack Dorsey. Id.
 190. See generally Seth C. Oranburg, A Place o
---
 Their Own: Crowds in the New Market

---
or Equity Crowd
---
unding, 100 MINN. L. REV. HEADNOTES 147 (2016), http://www.
minnesotalawreview.org/wp-content/uploads/2016/08/Oranburg-FINAL.pd
---
.




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                         1053


This Article’s proposed Rule 144B addresses that problem by instituting
a private independent analyst (“PIA”) who must monitor and report to
shareholders on each company listed on a 144B domestic venture
exchange.
    This Part explains how the 144B market will be de
---
ined by two
characteristics. First, Rule 144B would allow 
---
or the development o
---

stock exchanges—unlike Rule 144A which only allows 
---
or stock
markets—that do not restrict access to the stock exchange based on
wealth. This “equal access” principle is necessary to reduce or remove
the illiquidity discount asymmetry. Second, all companies listed on a
144B exchange must have a PIA. The PIA shall have access to board
meetings and books and records, much like a VC would, but unlike a VC
the PIA cannot have any interest in the stock price. This Part will
discuss criticism and limitations o
---
 a 144B market.

A. Venture Exchanges

    This Article recommends a new securities regulation 
---
ostering a
domestic venture exchange. To be clear, there already exists a domestic
venture market 
---
or the resale o
---
 startup stock that is legal under
current regulations. But the existing “Rule 144A Market” is merely an
in
---
ormal market, not a structured exchange. A market is any sort o
---

system, institution, process, relationship, or in
---
rastructure where
market participants can trade goods, services, or in
---
ormation 
---
or money
or other goods, services, or in
---
ormation.191 Market participants consist
o
---
 buyers and sellers who set prices based on supply and demand.192
The price re
---
lects the true value o
---
 the thing that is traded only when
the market is e
---

---
icient and per
---
ectly competitive.193 Market
ine
---

---
iciencies include time-inconsistent pre
---
erences,194 in
---
ormation


 191. See JEFFREY M. PERLOFF, MICROECONOMICS 3 (Donna Battista et al. eds., 5th ed.
2009).
 192. Id. at 11–26.
 193. This is called the e
---

---
icient-market hypothesis, a theory in 
---
inancial economics
which states that the price re
---
lects all the available in
---
ormation about a stock. Burton G.
Malkiel, The E
---

---
icient Market Hypothesis and Its Critics 3 (Princeton Univ., CEPS
Working Paper No. 91, 2003), https://www.princeton.edu/ceps/workingpapers/91malkiel.
pd
---
. No real-world markets are per
---
ectly e
---

---
icient, however, and the price only re
---
lects the
value to the extent that markets are e
---

---
icient. Id. at 3−4.
 194. See Manual A. Utset, Corporate Actors, Corporate Crimes and Time-Inconsistent
Pre
---
erences, 1 VA. J. CRIM. L. 265, 276–77 (2013) (“It turns out that individuals become
increasingly impatient the closer that they get to immediate payo
---

---
s; or, equivalently,

---
rom a short-term perspective they discount immediate payo
---

---
s by a greater amount than
they did when those payo
---

---
s were all still in the 
---
uture. It is this asymmetry between long-
term and short-term impatience that leads people to procrastinate and overconsume.”




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1054            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


asymmetries,195 principal-agent problems,196 externalities,197 or public
goods.198 Per
---
ect competition requires a large number o
---
 buyers and
sellers.199 Without e
---

---
iciency and competition, the market price is
distorted.
    A 
---
inancial market is a market 
---
or trading o
---
 securities (like stock
and bonds), currencies, 
---
ungible commodities, derivatives, 
---
utures,
insurance, and other 
---
inancial products. Financial market transactions
can occur either on or o
---

---
 an exchange. An o
---

---
-exchange, or over-the-
counter (“OTC”) transaction, is done directly between two parties.200 In


(
---
ootnote omitted)).
  195. Ian Ayres & Robert Gertner, Filling Gaps in Incomplete Contracts: An Economic
Theory o
---
 De
---
ault Rules, 99 YALE L.J. 87, 102 n.68 (1989) (“In the economics literature
several articles examine situations in which asymmetric in
---
ormation induces ine
---

---
icient
contracting.”).
  196. Robert Sitko
---

---
, The Economic Structure o
---
 Fiduciary Law, 91 B.U. L. REV. 1039,
1040 (2011) (“[A]n agency problem arises whenever one person, the principal, engages
another person, the agent, to undertake imper
---
ectly observable discretionary actions that
a
---

---
ect the wealth o
---
 the principal. The concern is that in exercising this unobservable
discretionary authority, the agent will 
---
avor the agent’s interests when the agent’s
interests diverge 
---
rom those o
---
 the principal.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
  197. Externalities are costs or bene
---
its con
---
erred upon others that are not taken into
account by the person taking the action. See generally A. C. PIGOU, THE ECONOMICS OF
WELFARE (4th ed. 1932).
  198. Wendy J. Gordon, Fair Use as Market Failure: A Structural and Economic
Analysis o
---
 the Betamax Case and Its Predecessors, 82 COLUM. L. REV. 1600, 1610–11
(1982) (“A public good is o
---
ten described as having two de
---
ining traits. First, it is virtually
inexhaustible once produced, in the sense that supplying additional access to new users
would not deplete the supply available to others. Second, and more important 
---
or the
instant purposes, persons who have not paid 
---
or access cannot readily be prevented 
---
rom
using a public good. Because it is di
---

---
icult or expensive to prevent ‘
---
ree riders’ 
---
rom using
such goods, public goods usually will be under-produced i
---
 le
---
t to the private market. A

---
amiliar example o
---
 a public good is national de
---
ense.” (
---
ootnotes omitted)).
  199. On the other hand, a market with a single seller is a monopoly, and a market with
a single buyer is a monopsony, which “are the polar opposites o
---
 per
---
ect competition.”
ROBERT S. PINDYCK & DANIEL L. RUBINFELD, MICROECONOMICS 349 (7th ed. 2009). Some
have even suggested that a market with only a single buyer and a single seller is not a
market at all. ARTHUR O’SULLIVAN & STEVEN M. SHEFFRIN, ECONOMICS: PRINCIPLES IN
ACTION 28 (2003).
  200. See Henry T.C. Hu, Misunderstood Derivatives: The Causes o
---
 In
---
ormational
Failure and the Promise o
---
 Regulatory Incrementalism, 102 YALE L.J. 1457, 1458−59,
1464−67 (1993) (“Innovation has been especially striking in the market 
---
or over-the-
counter (OTC) derivatives, a type o
---
 
---
inancial contract individually negotiated among
major 
---
inancial institutions and between such institutions and their sophisticated clients.”
(
---
ootnotes omitted)); Arthur E. Wilmarth, Jr., The Trans
---
ormation o
---
 the U.S. Financial
Services Industry, 1975−2000: Competition, Consolidation, and Increased Risks, 2002 U.
ILL. L. REV. 215, 333 n.486 (“Exchange-traded derivatives are standardized contracts,
including 
---
utures and options based on commodities and stock indexes, that are traded on
an organized exchange and are governed by the rules o
---
 that exchange. In contrast, OTC
derivatives are contracts that are individually negotiated between a ‘dealer’ (typically a




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                          1055


OTC 
---
inancial markets, buyers and sellers must incur searching costs
and opportunity costs to 
---
ind each other and then incur transaction
costs to complete the trade.201 OTC market transactions may be private,
in which case there is no price discovery process, and again price may
be distorted.202 Venture transactions today occur mainly in OTC
markets.
    The call 
---
or a “144B” venture-exchange sa
---
e harbor, in addition to
the “144A” venture OTC-market sa
---
e harbor, is solidly grounded in
legal and economic theories and empirical evidence that exchanges are
superior to OTC markets. Exchanges can solve 
---
ree rider problems and
coordination problems that OTC markets cannot.203 Even i
---
 markets can


money center bank, a large securities 
---
irm, or a major insurance company) and an ‘end-
user’ (usually a smaller 
---
inancial institution, business 
---
irm, or investor that wishes to buy
the derivatives either 
---
or speculation or 
---
or hedging against risks arising out o
---
 its
operations or its investment port
---
olio). Thus, OTC derivatives, such as 
---
orwards, options,
and swaps, are highly customized instruments and are not traded in any organized
secondary market.”); see also ALFRED STEINHERR, DERIVATIVES: THE WILD BEAST OF
FINANCE 170−223, 237−38 (1998); Peter H. Huang, A Normative Analysis o
---
 New
Financially Engineered Derivatives, 73 S. CAL. L. REV. 471, 485 (2000); Roberta Romano,
A Thumbnail Sketch o
---
 Derivative Securities and Their Regulation, 55 MD. L. REV. 1,
7−31, 40−51 (1996).
 201. Darrell Du
---

---
ie, Nicolae Garleanu & Lasse Heje Pedersen, Over-the-Counter
Markets, 71 ECONOMETRICA 1815, 1815 (2005) (“In over-the-counter markets, an investor
who wishes to sell must search 
---
or a buyer, incurring opportunity or other costs until one
is 
---
ound. Some over-the-counter (OTC) markets there
---
ore have intermediaries. Contact
with relevant intermediaries, however, is not immediate. O
---
ten, intermediaries must be
approached sequentially. Hence, when two counterparties meet, their bilateral
relationship is inherently strategic. Prices are set through a bargaining process.”).
 202. For example, OTC 
---
inancial markets 
---
or credit derivatives, commercial paper,
municipal bonds, securitized student loans, and other products became di
---

---
icult to value
in the 
---
inancial crisis o
---
 2007–2009, which led to a downward spiral o
---
 illiquidity, which

---
urther inhibit price discovery, which then increased illiquidity, under which entire
markets seized up and became dys
---
unctional. See Randall Dodd, Markets: Exchange or
Over-the-Counter, INT’L MONETARY FUND, http://www.im
---
.org/external/pubs/
---
t/
---
andd/
basics/markets.htm (last updated Mar. 28, 2012) (“Without liquid and orderly markets,
there was no price discovery process and in turn no easy and de
---
initive way to value the
securities. The 
---
ailure o
---
 the price discovery process aggravated the problems at banks and
other 
---
inancial 
---
irms during the recent crisis by making it more di
---

---
icult to meet
disclosure and reporting requirements on the value o
---
 their securities and derivatives
positions. Not only were there no e
---

---
icient direct market prices, there were o
---
ten no
benchmark prices (which are prices o
---
 assets similar to the one being valued). As a result,
the assets and positions that were once valued at market prices were instead valued
through models that sometimes were not adequately in
---
ormed by benchmark prices.
These valuation problems 
---
urther depressed prices o
---
 a
---

---
ected securities.”).
 203. Roberta Romano, Empowering Investors: A Market Approach to Securities
Regulation, 107 YALE L.J. 2359, 2399 (1998) (“Exchanges can solve 
---
ree rider problems
concerning in
---
ormation production encountered by individual 
---
irms, as well as
coordination problems presented by investors’ need 
---
or standardized disclosure. Thus




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1056            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


be only relatively and not 
---
ully e
---

---
icient,204 exchanges are more e
---

---
icient
than OTC markets.205 The SEC’s power to police OTC transactions is
more limited than its power to police exchange transactions.206 Private
litigants may be deprived o
---
 “
---
raud-on-the-market” claims in OTC
markets.207 Empirical economic studies strongly support the claim that
exchanges like the NYSE are e
---

---
icient markets.208 Exchanges produce
valuable in
---
ormation as a byproduct o
---
 market trading.209 Exchanges
are more resilient and less prone to systemic 
---
ailure than OTC
markets.210 And exchanges and OTC markets compete with each other,
making both 
---
unction more e
---

---
iciently.211



exchanges could replace the government as the solution to a securities market 
---
ailure.”).
 204. Je
---

---
rey N. Gordon & Lewis A. Kornhauser, E
---

---
icient Markets, Costly In
---
ormation,
and Securities Research, 60 N.Y.U. L. REV. 761, 830 (1985) (“I
---
 markets are only relatively
e
---

---
icient, as we expect, then it is wrong to regard the search 
---
or undervalued securities by
institutional investors as irrational behavior.”).
 205. Donald C. Langevoort, Theories, Assumptions, and Securities Regulation: Market
E
---

---
iciency Revisited, 140 U. PA. L. REV. 851, 873 n.70 (1992) (“By hypothesis, the over-the-
counter markets are presumed to be less e
---

---
icient because o
---
 the lower levels o
---
 liquidity
and pro
---
essional investor/analyst interest.”).
 206. See Securities Exchange Act o
---
 1934 § 15, 15 U.S.C. § 78o (2012), amended by Pub.
L. No. 114-94, 129 Stat. 1312 (2015).
 207. See Brad
---
ord Cornell & R. Gregory Morgan, Using Finance Theory to Measure
Damages in Fraud on the Market Cases, 37 UCLA L. REV. 883, 918 (1990) (noting that the
de
---
endants’ argument regarding the 
---
raud-on-the-market theory o
---
 reliance was
inappropriate because the securities were traded in the over-the-counter market, not on a
stock exchange).
 208. Eugene F. Fama, E
---

---
icient Capital Markets: A Review o
---
 Theory and Empirical
Work, 25 J. FIN. 383, 416 (1970) (“In short, the evidence in support o
---
 the e
---

---
icient
markets model is extensive, and (somewhat uniquely in economics) contradictory evidence
is sparse.”).
 209. Ronald J. Gilson & Reinier H. Kraakman, The Mechanisms o
---
 Market E
---

---
iciency,
70 VA. L. REV. 549, 609 (1984) (“This [historical price] in
---
ormation is an ordinary
byproduct o
---
 market trading: the organized securities exchanges produce it as a routine
service, and the 
---
inancial press serves to collectivize its low cost dissemination.” (
---
ootnote
omitted)).
 210. SEC Legislation, 1963: Hearings on S. 1642 Be
---
ore the Subcomm. o
---
 the S. Comm.
on Banking & Currency, 88th Cong. 12 (1963) (statement o
---
 William L. Cary, Chairman,
U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission) (“It is well known that the over-the-counter
market has not shown the same resiliency since that sharp decline as the exchange
markets, both in terms o
---
 price and o
---
 volume.”).
 211. John C. Co
---

---
ee, Jr., Regulating the Market 
---
or Corporate Control: A Critical
Assessment o
---
 the Tender O
---

---
er’s Role in Corporate Governance, 84 COLUM. L. REV. 1145,
1257 (1984) (“Increasingly, the stock exchanges are in competition with the over-the-
counter market, where the emergence o
---
 a computerized inter-dealer quotation system
gives issuers an inviting alternative to the exchanges.”); Paul G. Mahoney, The Exchange
as Regulator, 83 VA. L. REV. 1453, 1457 (1997) (“As a provider o
---
 liquidity, an exchange
competes with other exchanges and over-the-counter markets, both to attract companies
to list and to induce investors to purchase listed securities.”).




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2016]                   DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                           1057


    Considering the many bene
---
its o
---
 exchanges over OTC markets, it is
curious that the SEC has not already acted to create a domestic venture
exchange. One explanation 
---
or the SEC’s inaction is regulatory capture
o
---
 the SEC by the wealthiest 
---
irms who bene
---
it 
---
rom the illiquidity
discount asymmetry and pro
---
it 
---
rom the lack o
---
 an equal-access venture
exchange.212 Regulatory capture typically results in policies that 
---
avor a
concentrated and power
---
ul interest group.213 The lack o
---
 a rule like the
proposed Rule 144B may simply re
---
lect that such a rule would bene
---
it a
diverse, heterogeneous, disempowered group, like startup employees
and poorer stockholders.
    Another explanation 
---
or the lack o
---
 an equal-access venture-
exchange rule is bounded rationality o
---
 regulators.214 Many legal
scholars have pointed out how the bounded rationality o
---
 the SEC may
inhibit that agency 
---
rom promulgating 
---
orward-looking regulations that
help grow the economy (instead o
---
 merely preventing the last crisis 
---
rom
occurring again).215 This line o
---
 economic argument has legal
implications, such as discouraging the use o
---
 regulators to set prices.216


  212. For an explanation o
---
 regulatory capture in the context o
---
 corporate governance
regulation, see William W. Bratton & Joseph A. McCahery, Regulatory Competition,
Regulatory Capture, and Corporate Sel
---
-Regulation, 73 N.C. L. REV. 1861, 1885–86 (1995)
(“Under capture theories o
---
 regulation, interest groups and political decision makers enter
into jointly maximizing relationships. The simple demand model o
---
 capture asserts that
lawmaking 
---
ollows the lawmakers’ responses to demand patterns. Particular responses
depend on interactions between the lawmakers’ risk pro
---
iles and the projected bene
---
its o
---

legislative action. The lawmaker, being risk averse, tries to avoid con
---
licts—given no
demand 
---
or legislation, nothing is done; given organized demand, the lawmaker attempts
to satis
---
y the interest group making the demand with bene
---
icial legislation. In addition,
interest groups desiring to in
---
luence legislation encounter collective action problems.
Di
---

---
erent groups have di
---

---
erent abilities to overcome them—the smaller the group and the
higher the per capita stake o
---
 its members, the greater the likelihood that the members
will work out a collective arrangement and enjoy the bene
---
its o
---
 governmental in
---
luence.
This activity results, according to the theorists o
---
 the Virginia School, in a social loss 
---
rom
rent-seeking. Legislators create rents 
---
or the bene
---
it o
---
 success
---
ul interest groups,
distributing them based on a sel
---
-seeking vote calculus.” (
---
ootnotes omitted)).
  213. See Gary S. Becker, A Theory o
---
 Competition Among Pressure Groups 
---
or Political
In
---
luence, 98 Q.J. ECON. 371, 372 (1983) (explaining how regulatory capture in
---
luences
public policy).
  214. Bounded rationality generally means that humans have limited cognitive abilities
and there
---
ore must rely or heuristics and other mental shortcuts to make decisions. See
Herbert A. Simon, A Behavioral Model o
---
 Rational Choice, 69 Q.J. ECON. 99, 99 (1955); see
also Russell B. Korobkin & Thomas S. Ulen, Law and Behavioral Science: Removing the
Rationality Assumption 
---
rom Law and Economics, 88 CALIF. L. REV. 1051, 1069 (2000)
(“This ‘bounded rationality’ results 
---
rom the high cost o
---
 processing in
---
ormation, the
cognitive limitations o
---
 human beings, or a combination o
---
 the two.”).
  215. See, e.g., Stephen M. Bainbridge, Mandatory Disclosure: A Behavioral Analysis, 68
U. CIN. L. REV. 1023, 1057–58 (2000) (“[L]egislators and regulators are no less subject to
bounded rationality and other cognitive biases than any other decisionmakers.”); Stephen




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1058           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


    I
---
 the regulatory capture and bounded rationality explanations are
true, it may be di
---

---
icult 
---
or the SEC to create a rule like the proposed
144B. But a di
---

---
erent explanation may better explain SEC behavior and

---
rame the solution. The SEC may have recognized that investors su
---

---
er

---
rom cognitive 
---
ailings.217 It could be di
---

---
icult 
---
or the SEC to 
---
ul
---
ill its
mission o
---
 “protecting investors” i
---
 it were to permit a domestic venture
exchange in which investors could employ 
---
lawed heuristics to make
bad decisions. One must ask whether the SEC is 
---
orbidding a venture
exchange in order to protect investors 
---
rom 
---
raud or simply to protect
investors 
---
rom themselves. The 
---
ormer explanation re
---
lects appropriate
agency behavior. The latter “smacks o
---
 an unthinking paternalism that
reveals its own institutional shortcomings.”218
    This Article assumes that the SEC is capable o
---
 overcoming
regulatory capture and bounded rationality, i
---
 any, provided that a
proposed rule like 144B has su
---

---
icient protections 
---
rom 
---
raud. The next
Subpart analyzes why 
---
raud occurred in other venture exchanges and
then proposes employing a PIA as a solution to mitigate 
---
raud and help
investors make better decisions in 144B exchange transactions.

B. Private Independent Analysts

    The SEC has good reason to be concerned about 
---
raud in secondary
private stock marketplaces. SEC Commissioner Aguilar said: “Venture
exchanges are hardly a new idea, however, and prior e
---

---
orts to establish
them in this country have 
---
ared poorly. Accordingly, we need a
thought
---
ul and prudent approach that care
---
ully examines why the prior
attempts 
---
ailed” because “[t]hose who cannot remember the past are
condemned to repeat it.”219 This Subpart will explain why prior



J. Choi & A.C. Pritchard, Behavioral Economics and the SEC, 56 STAN. L. REV. 1, 25
(2003) (“Closely related to bounded rationality are the heuristics that regulators use to
manage the deluge o
---
 in
---
ormation and problems stemming 
---
rom the 
---
inancial markets.
Like investors, regulators su
---

---
er 
---
rom the availability heuristic, 
---
ocusing too much
attention on recent and immediately available in
---
ormation.”).
  216. Edward L. Rubin, Commentary, The New Legal Process, the Synthesis o
---

Discourse, and the Microanalysis o
---
 Institutions, 109 HARV. L. REV. 1393, 1431 (1996)
(“Li
---
eline banking may be a promising idea, but the bounded rationality o
---
 banking
regulators may render them unable to set prices at the proper level.”).
  217. Choi & Pritchard, supra note 215, at 71 (“The evidence that investors su
---

---
er 
---
rom
cognitive 
---
ailings is impressive.”).
  218. Richard A. Epstein, Regulatory Paternalism in the Market 
---
or Drugs: Lessons 
---
rom
Vioxx and Celebrex, 5 YALE J. HEALTH POL’Y L. & ETHICS 741, 748 (2005) (“Protection
against 
---
raud is one thing; paternalism, whether or not intended, is quite another.”).
  219. Id.




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                         1059


attempts 
---
ailed and provide a solution to prevent such 
---
ailures in the

---
uture.
     Venture stock exchanges have been 
---
ailed experiments across the
globe. The only domestic venture exchange, the American Stock
Exchange Emerging Company Marketplace, launched on March 18,
1992 and closed on May 11, 1995, ending in what can only be described
as a “
---
ailure.”220 Overseas, the French Nouveau Marché launched in
1996, the German Neuer Markt launched in 1997, and the Italian
Nuovo Mercato launched in 1999 “to attract early stage, innovative and
high-growth 
---
irms that would not have been viable candidates 
---
or public
equity 
---
inancing on the main markets o
---
 European stock exchanges.”221
Instead, “[i]nsider trading scandals and accounting 
---
rauds tarnished the
reputation o
---
 new markets. As a result, investor con
---
idence quickly
disappeared.”222
     The 
---
ailure o
---
 venture exchanges can be attributed to the 
---
act that
listed companies have the worst o
---
 corporate governance problems o
---

both private corporations and public corporations, with 
---
ew o
---
 the
bene
---
its. On the one hand, exchange participants lack the investor
protections typically 
---
ound in VC arrangements, such as active
monitoring and restrictive covenants, that protect against in
---
ormation
asymmetries and entrepreneurs’ opportunism. On the other hand,
exchange participants lack the in
---
ormation typically provided by public-
company listing requirements. The in
---
ormation problem is compounded
by the 
---
act that exchanges may lack incentives to require their listed
companies to make disclosures or to police those disclosures 
---
or
completeness and accuracy.
     To 
---
rame this argument in more theoretical terms, a VC-
---
unded
company allocates a disproportionate amount o
---
 control to its VC
owners.223 In addition to these contractual VC control rights, VCs also
control their port
---
olio companies through staged 
---
inancing.224 The VC-


 220. Aggarwal & Angel, supra note 125, at 258.
 221. Pre
---
ace to 10 THE RISE AND FALL OF EUROPE’S NEW STOCK MARKETS ix (Giancarlo
Giudici & Peter Roosenboom eds., 2004).
 222. Id.
 223. Gilson, supra note 82, at 1096 (“In the United States, the venture capital
contracting structure turns the Berle-Means problem on its head. Instead o
---
 assuming
less control than their proportion o
---
 equity would dictate, venture capital investors in the
United States take greater control positions than their proportion o
---
 equity. Not only do
they obtain veto rights over major decisions, retain the continuation decision, and o
---
ten
control a majority o
---
 the board, but they also retain the right to terminate the
entrepreneur.”).
 224. Id. at 1074 (“[S]taged 
---
inancing in e
---

---
ect delegates to the investors, in the 
---
orm o
---

the decision whether to provide additional 
---
inancing, the decision whether to continue the




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1060            RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313



---
unded company thus stands in sharp contrast to the Berle-Means
corporation, where there is the endemic problem o
---
 the separation o
---

ownership and control.225 The VC-
---
unded company is also di
---

---
erent 
---
rom
a nexus-o
---
-contract public company because VCs have the authority and
tools to deal with excessive agency costs.226 The advantages that VC-

---
unded companies have in dealing with agency problems are lost when
the VC sells shares on an exchange to third parties that are not in
privity with the issuer. Without privity, investors may lack the
contractual power to discipline management, the ability to in
---
luence
management through staged investment, and the tools to monitor
management.
    Instead o
---
 taking on the worst problems o
---
 both VC-
---
unded and
publicly-traded companies, the 144B exchange could be used to
incentivize corporations seeking liquidity to adopt corporate governance
that re
---
lects their most success
---
ul practices. There
---
ore, the crux o
---
 the
144B exchange must be to return the power o
---
 monitoring and
disciplining management to the stockholders. This can be accomplished
by installing a quasi-VC called the PIA. The PIA would represent the
shareholders on the venture exchange much like a VC manager
represents the members o
---
 its VC 
---
und, except the PIA’s compensation
is not based on stock per
---
ormance. Rule 144B could require all
companies listed on a 144B exchange to provide contractual control
rights to the PIA, similar to those 
---
ound in VC contracts. For example,
the PIA would have the right to attend board meetings, vote on

---
undamental corporate transactions (including mergers, major
acquisitions, and sales o
---
 substantially all assets), prevent the company



company’s project.”).
 225. Id. at 1073–74 (“In direct contrast to the 
---
amiliar Berle-Means governance
structure o
---
 outside investors having disproportionately less control than equity, the
governance structure o
---
 a venture capital-backed early stage, high technology company
allocates to the venture capital investors disproportionately greater control than equity. It
is common 
---
or venture capital investors to have the right to name a majority o
---
 a port
---
olio
company’s directors even though their stock represents less than a majority o
---
 the
port
---
olio company’s voting power. Additionally, the port
---
olio company will have the
bene
---
it o
---
 a series o
---
 contractual negative covenants that require the venture capital
investors’ approval be
---
ore the port
---
olio company can make important business decisions,
such as acquisition or disposition o
---
 signi
---
icant amounts o
---
 assets, or a material deviation

---
rom the business plan.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
 226. Frank H. Easterbrook & Daniel R. Fischel, The Proper Role o
---
 a Target’s
Management in Responding to a Tender O
---

---
er, 94 HARV. L. REV. 1161, 1171 (1981) (“The

---
ree riding problems that inhibit monitoring by shareholders are aggravated by the
di
---

---
iculty any shareholder would 
---
ace in doing anything about the 
---
irm’s managers once he
discovered the existence o
---
 excessive agency costs. The shareholder who makes the
discovery has no authority to compel the 
---
irm to change its ways.”).




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2016]                  DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                          1061



---
rom issuing more stock, prevent the company 
---
rom taking on a large
senior debt, and vote on management salaries.
    In addition to contractual control rights that are similar to what a
VC would receive, the PIA would also have responsibilities to produce
valuable public in
---
ormation. In the public-company context, stock
analysts review publicly available in
---
ormation and o
---
ten have private
access to corporate management.227 The analyst reviews corporate and
systemic in
---
ormation and reports whether the company is correctly
valued by its stock price. This is a valuable service because it
centralizes e
---

---
orts that would otherwise have to be duplicated by all
stockholders. This reduces the cost o
---
 monitoring a corporation and
reduces shareholders’ rational apathy problems. Analyst reports are
integral to overcoming corporate governance problems, but it is hard 
---
or
smaller 
---
irms to attract analyst coverage.228 By requiring 144B
exchange-traded companies to produce analyst reports, the micro-cap
companies on 144B exchanges could actually have 
---
ewer corporate
governance problems than small-cap companies on national stock
exchanges.
    The PIA concept is rein
---
orced by the real-world example o
---
 the
advisors and brokers (called nominated advisors or “Nomads”) that are
required by the world’s most success
---
ul venture exchange, the AIM.229


  227. One problem public stock analysts 
---
ace is that their private access may be cut o
---

---
 i
---

they issue negative reports. See, e.g., Bernard S. Black, Shareholder Passivity
Reexamined, 89 MICH. L. REV. 520, 602 (1990) (“Companies o
---
ten cut o
---

---
 access 
---
or stock
analysts who issue negative reports.”). This is a problem that would be solved in the 144B
exchange, where analyst access is a prerequisite 
---
or listing.
  228. Marcel Kahan & Edward Rock, The Insigni
---
icance o
---
 Proxy Access, 97 VA. L. REV.
1347, 1369–70 (2011) (“But when a company 
---
alls below the $300 million market cap, it is
extremely di
---

---
icult to attract attention 
---
rom analysts or investors. These 
---
irms are lucky i
---

a single analyst 
---
ollows them. With so little attention, the market 
---
or such companies’
shares is 
---
ar less in
---
ormationally e
---

---
icient than 
---
or mid-cap or large-cap companies.
Similarly, micro-cap companies present distinctive governance challenges.” (
---
ootnotes
omitted)); see also Joshua M. Koenig, A Brie
---
 Roadmap to Going Private, 2004 COLUM.
BUS. L. REV. 505, 512 (“In addition, many companies have been hurt by regulatory e
---

---
orts
to separate stock research 
---
rom investment banking, which has led Wall Street to cut
analyst coverage o
---
 small-cap stocks.”).
  229. The AIM lists over 1000 companies that have a combined market value (or total
market capitalization) o
---
 $115 billion and an average daily trading volume o
---
 over
$200 million. LONDON STOCK EXCH. GRP., AIM FACTSHEET (2015), http://www.londonstock
exchange.com/statistics/historic/aim/aim-statistics-archive-2015/june-15.pd
---
. To put those

---
igures in context, the NYSE, which is the largest stock exchange in the world, has about
25,000 listed companies with a total market capitalization o
---
 $20 trillion and an average
daily trading volume o
---
 over $3 billion, and NASDAQ has almost 30,000 listings with a
total market capitalization o
---
 $7 trillion and an average daily trading volume o
---
 around
$1.7 billion. Market Data Center, WALL ST. J., http://online.wsj.com/mdc/public/page/
2_3021-tradingdiary2.html (last updated Apr. 8, 2016). But not all stock exchanges are so




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1062           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


Scholars such as Pro
---
essor William K. Sjostrom, Jr. have explained how
this AIM Nomad model has proved quite success
---
ul.230 The Nomad is
responsible 
---
or guaranteeing the quality o
---
 the company to investors,
and the broker is tasked with providing liquidity with “bid and ask
prices.”231 Nomads include accounting 
---
irms and investment banks that
must be pre-approved by the London Stock Exchange.232 A Nomad
determines a company’s suitability 
---
or listing on AIM, manages the
o
---

---
ering process, and advises the company on regulatory matters.233
There is a market 
---
or Nomads, where their reputation is their currency,
which incentivizes Nomads to per
---
orm their role diligently.234




large: the NYSE and NASDAQ together are larger than the next ten largest exchanges
combined. Andy Kiersz, The NYSE Makes Stock Exchanges Around the World Look Tiny,
BUS. INSIDER (Nov. 18, 2014, 11:02 AM), http://www.businessinsider.com/global-stock-
market-capitalization-chart-2014-11 (“[T]he two U.S. exchanges together have a larger
market cap than the next ten exchanges combined.”). In 
---
act, the AIM is about the same
size as public national stock markets, including the Santiago Stock Exchange
($221 billion), the Tel Aviv Stock Exchange ($223 billion), and the Oslo Børs
($227 billion). Monthly Reports, WORLD FED’N OF EXCHANGES, http://www.world-
exchanges.org/statistics/monthly-reports (last visited July 30, 2015). In other words, while
the AIM is dwar
---
ed by the NYSE and NASDAQ, so are most o
---
 the other stock exchanges
in the world. The AIM, there
---
ore, is capable o
---
 providing a level o
---
 liquidity to private
stockholders on par with the liquidity available to holders o
---
 public stock listed on many
other national exchanges. See AIM, LONDON STOCK EXCHANGE, http://www.londonstock
exchange.com/companies-and-advisors/aim/aim/aim.htm (last visited Apr. 10, 2016).
  230. William K. Sjostrom, Jr., Carving a New Path to Equity Capital and Share
Liquidity, 50 B.C. L. REV. 639, 673–74 (2009).
  231. Giancarlo Giudici & Peter Roosenboom, Venture Capital and New Stock Markets
in Europe, in 10 THE RISE AND FALL OF EUROPE’S NEW STOCK MARKETS, supra note 221,
at 16–17; see also Hse-Yu Chiu, Can UK Small Businesses Obtain Growth Capital in the
Public Equity Markets?—An Overview o
---
 the Shortcomings in UK and European Securities
Regulation and Considerations 
---
or Re
---
orm, 28 DEL. J. CORP. L. 933, 950 n.87 (2003)
(“[T]he Alternative Investment Market run by the London Stock Exchange reduces costs

---
or small business issuers by requiring only a nominated broker and nominated adviser

---
or trading and compliance purposes.”); Stéphane Rousseau, London Calling?: The
Experience o
---
 the Alternative Investment Market and the Competitiveness o
---
 Canadian
Stock Exchanges, 23 BANKING & FIN. L. REV. 51, 60 (2007) (“AIM rules do not establish
speci
---
ic requirements to be met by companies seeking admission. Rather they require that
every company seeking admission appoint a nominated advisor (‘nomad’) and a broker.”).
  232. LONDON STOCK EXCH., A GUIDE TO AIM 12 (2015), https://www.londonstock
exchange.com/companies-and-advisors/aim/publications/ documents/a-guide-to-aim.pd
---
.
  233. LONDON STOCK EXCH., AIM RULES FOR NOMINATED ADVISERS 8–10 (2014),
http://www.londonstockexchange.com/companies-and-advisors/aim/publications/aim-rules-

---
or-nominated-advisers.pd
---
 [http://perma.cc/JVQ8-3VUX].
  234. Jose Miguel Mendoza, Securities Regulation in Low-Tier Listing Venues: The Rise
o
---
 the Alternative Investment Market, 13 FORDHAM J. CORP. & FIN. L. 257, 295 (2008)
(“Speci
---
ically, Nomads bear signi
---
icant damages 
---
or tolerating misdemeanors on behal
---
 o
---

their supervised companies, including the loss o
---
 ‘reputational capital.’”).




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2016]                 DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                                        1063


    Applying the PIA model to 144B exchanges potentially solves the
most serious problem 
---
aced by venture exchanges. Venture exchanges
have a “market 
---
or lemons”235 problem because companies typically use
the venture exchange as a staging ground. The most success
---
ul
companies on a venture exchange may trans
---
er to a better-regarded
exchange in order to signal that the company is o
---
 higher quality. But
this also signals that the remaining 
---
irms on the exchange are o
---
 lower
quality, which encourages the next best 
---
irms to leave that exchange in
order to separate themselves 
---
rom that pooling equilibrium. This
creates a downward spiral that ends with only the lowest quality

---
irms—the lemons—le
---
t on the venture exchange.
    The PIA model solves the lemons problem by trans
---
erring the
quality signal 
---
rom the exchange to the PIA. Having a highly regarded
PIA approve a company sends a strong signal about 
---
irm quality even i
---

that 
---
irm is trading on an exchange o
---
 no repute. The 
---
irm no longer has
to leave the exchange in order to separate itsel
---
 
---
rom low quality
exchange participants because the 144B exchange creates a reputation
market 
---
or PIAs as well as 
---
irms.236

C. Application

    A highlight o
---
 this Article’s 144B proposal is that this rule can be
promulgated by the SEC without an act o
---
 Congress. Generally, an
agency may implement its delegated authority through rulemaking.237
When Congress explicitly delegates to an agency rulemaking authority
to e
---

---
ectuate a statute, “[s]uch legislative regulations are given
controlling weight unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or mani
---
estly
contrary to the statute.”238 “[T]he [Exchange] Act con
---
erred [broad,]
open-ended rulemaking authority on the SEC.”239 The JOBS Act also
granted speci
---
ic rulemaking authority to the SEC to create new



 235. See generally Darian M. Ibrahim, Equity Crowd
---
unding: A Market 
---
or Lemons?,
100 MINN. L. REV. 561 (2015).
 236. This is similar to what has occurred in the AIM Nomad model. Mendoza, supra
note 234, at 295–96 (“Accordingly, AIM can be considered a ‘reputational market,’ in
which investors rely on the standing o
---
 Nomads as a proxy 
---
or the quality o
---
 listed
companies, rather than on the market’s regulation.”).
 237. See John F. Manning, Constitutional Structure and Judicial De
---
erence to Agency
Interpretations o
---
 Agency Rules, 96 COLUM. L. REV. 612, 664 (1996).
 238. Chevron, U.S.A., Inc. v. Nat. Res. De
---
. Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844 (1984).
 239. Steve Thel, The Original Conception o
---
 Section 10(b) o
---
 the Securities Exchange
Act, 42 STAN. L. REV. 385, 394 (1990) (“The sophisticated, interested participants in the
debates, as well as the authors o
---
 the [Exchange] Act, understood that the Act con
---
erred
open-ended rulemaking authority on the SEC.”).




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1064           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


exemptions to securities regulations.240 General legal principles,
rulemaking history, and speci
---
ic statutory language demonstrate that
the SEC is authorized to promulgate Rule 144B.
     The SEC has authority to promulgate exemptions to securities
regulations. The SEC promulgated the other exemptions to securities
regulations—including Regulation D, Rule 144, and Rule 144A—under
its rulemaking power.241 The recent and similar exemption, Rule 144A,
was proposed by the SEC and adopted pursuant to the SEC’s notice-
and-comment process, without any action by Congress.242 That Rule has
never been challenged 
---
or improper delegation or abuse o
---
 agency
power.
     It could even be argued that the SEC has an a
---

---
irmative obligation
to promulgate a venture-exchange, sa
---
e-harbor exemption. Section 503
o
---
 the JOBS Act stipulates that “[t]he Commission shall also adopt sa
---
e
harbor provisions that issuers can 
---
ollow when determining whether
holders o
---
 their securities received the securities pursuant to an
employee compensation plan in transactions that were exempt 
---
rom the
registration requirements o
---
 section 5 o
---
 the Securities Act o
---
 1933.”243
This command seems to direct the SEC to promulgate rulemaking,
allowing employees to resell their exercised stock options. The
employee-stock resale exemption as mandated by Congress would be



  240. A. C. Pritchard, Revisiting “Truth in Securities” Revisited: Abolishing IPOs and
Harnessing Private Markets in the Public Good, 36 SEATTLE U. L. REV. 999, 1001 (2013)
(“Congress has partially addressed this problem with its recent adoption o
---
 the Jumpstart
Our Business Startups Act (JOBS Act). Unhappy with the SEC’s somewhat tepid e
---

---
orts
to 
---
acilitate capital raising by smaller companies, Congress gave the SEC new authority
to exempt o
---

---
erings 
---
rom the requirements 
---
or registered o
---

---
erings.”).
  241. See James R. Doty, Toward a Reg. FCPA: A Modest Proposal 
---
or Change in
Administering the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act, 62 BUS. LAW. 1233, 1234−35 (2007)
(“Regulation D and Regulation S under the Securities Act o
---
 1933, Rules 144, 144A and
415 thereunder, and Regulation M under the Securities Exchange Act o
---
 1934 are all
examples o
---
 SEC rulemaking intended to provide clarity and de
---
inition in connection with
the requirements o
---
 the statutory scheme.” (
---
ootnotes omitted)); see also Robert W. Tarun
& Peter P. Tomczak, A Proposal 
---
or a United States Department o
---
 Justice Foreign
Corrupt Practices Act Leniency Policy, 47 AM. CRIM. L. REV. 153, 170 (2010) (“Modeled
a
---
ter precedent SEC regulation such as Regulation D and Rules 144 and 144A, Reg. FCPA
would establish a permissive 
---
iling regime, created through SEC rule-making . . . .”).
  242. Resale o
---
 Restricted Securities; Changes to Method o
---
 Determining Holding Period
o
---
 Restricted Securities Under Rules 144 and 145, Securities Act Release No. 6862, 46
SEC Docket 26 (Apr. 23, 1990) (“On October 25, 1988, the Commission proposed Rule
144A (the ‘Rule’) to provide a non-exclusive sa
---
e harbor exemption 
---
rom the registration
requirements o
---
 the Securities Act o
---
 1933 (the ‘Securities Act’) 
---
or speci
---
ied resales o
---

restricted securities to institutional investors.” (
---
ootnote omitted)).
  243. Jumpstart Our Business Startups Act, Pub. L. No. 112-106, § 503, 126 Stat. 306,
326 (2012) (codi
---
ied as amended in scattered sections o
---
 15 U.S.C.).




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2016]               DEMOCRATIZING STARTUPS                               1065


achieved by promulgating a rule like 144B. No such a
---

---
irmative
obligation mandated Rule 144A, so the SEC’s authority 
---
or Rule 144B is
even stronger.

                                CONCLUSION

    This Article has explained why staying private is antithetical to
democratizing startups. Yet even the law that speci
---
ically intends to
democratize startups, the JOBS Act, has some provisions that
encourage startups to stay private. This may seem schizophrenic, but
staying private o
---

---
ers many economic advantages. Moreover, there are
market 
---
orces beyond securities regulations that also encourage
startups to stay private.
    The problem is not that startups are staying private; rather, the
problem is that securities laws have not adapted to this new reality.
Staying private, in itsel
---
, is neither good nor bad. It is a trend that
needs to be understood by scholars and applied to securities
regulations. This trend is readily understandable in an environment
where being public is quite expensive and burdensome. The law must
produce bright-line solutions 
---
or staying private in an evolving
economy. Otherwise, companies will 
---
ind their own solutions in the
shadows.
    Securities regulations have not produced a coherent solution
because there are trade-o
---

---
s between 
---
orming capital, protecting
investors, and democratizing startups. Staying private 
---
acilitates
certain types o
---
 capital 
---
ormation but 
---
rustrates the democratizing
capability o
---
 startups. Enabling startups to stay private encourages
concentrated capital 
---
ormation. The 
---
lip side is that it discourages
recycling capital in new and diverse enterprises. Capital 
---
ormation may
be enhanced by allowing new investors who are currently not permitted
to buy private-company stock to invest in startups, but these investors
are also the most susceptible to 
---
raud, rational apathy, bounced
rationality, and other cognitive 
---
ailures. There has not yet been a
solution that balances these equities in a resale market 
---
or private-
company stock.
    This Article suggests that a 144B sa
---
e-harbor exemption—a rule
that the SEC can promulgate without an act o
---
 Congress—provides 
---
or
an “independent analyst” to monitor and sa
---
eguard investments and
strikes an acceptable balance. Without a resale exemption, small,
private-company stockholders 
---
ace many disadvantages. Yet a resale
exemption subjects those same small stockholders to the risk o
---
 
---
raud-
on-the-market. One solution is to create a resale exemption that




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02_ORANBURG.DOCX                                                  1/20/17 1:45 PM




1066           RUTGERS UNIVERSITY LAW REVIEW[Vol. 68:101313


balances su
---

---
icient investor protections with limited disclosure
requirements. The development o
---
 liquid, transparent, and 
---
air 144B
exchanges 
---
or the transaction o
---
 private-company stock could 
---
acilitate
recycling o
---
 capital and promote democratizing startups.
    An exemption like 144B expressly contemplates the development o
---

multiple private-stock exchanges. Exchanges can experiment with
various levels o
---
 disclosure requirements and investor protections. The
result could be a market 
---
or stock markets where issuing startups,
stockholders, and investors can shop around 
---
or the optimal mix o
---

sunlight and e
---

---
iciency. This 
---
lexibility would help to keep securities
regulations 
---
rom becoming quickly outdated as the nature o
---
 investment
changes. The SEC could retain the right to permit only certain types o
---

investors into certain markets based on risk o
---
 the exchange, amount o
---

investment, sophistication o
---
 investor, age o
---
 the issuing company, or
other 
---
actors. The concern 
---
or the SEC is to avoid creating new 
---
inancial
asymmetries by giving the wealthiest investors exclusive access to the
best markets, as it did with Rule 144A.
    Modernizing securities regulations to protect investors while
capitalizing the 
---
uture o
---
 innovative startups requires a deeper review
o
---
 the entire body o
---
 securities regulation, which is beyond the scope o
---

this Article. For example, the accredited investor standard, which is
based solely on wealth, could potentially be replaced by a more nuanced
standard o
---
 investor sophistication. Modern technology, like online

---
eedback tools and reputation networks, could provide novel solutions to
eighty-year-old securities regulation problems.
    Promulgation o
---
 Rule 144B could signal the beginning o
---
 the SEC’s
recognition o
---
 a paradigm shi
---
t in business associations. By
implementing a rule designed 
---
or the continued operation o
---
 large,
private companies, the academy and the regulators can start to re
---
orm
the securities regulations to accommodate the modern reality o
---
 staying
private. More and more companies choose to be large, widely-held
organizations that never intend to go public, and our securities
regulations need to account 
---
or this new reality.




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