Bankless Times
Crowdfunding for equity solutions series Part 2: Advertising and advice
HomeNewsCrowdfunding for equity solutions series Part 2: Advertising and advice

Crowdfunding for equity solutions series Part 2: Advertising and advice

News Desk
News Desk
January 31st, 2023
Why trust us
Advertiser Disclosure

David Drake of LDJ Capital continues today with his second article of his series regarding crowdfunding for equity solutions.

Advertising

The Act already addresses, and prohibits compensation for several categories of activities, including the purchase of potential investor information. It also forbids directly soliciting investors or directing them to specific investment vehicles. What is permitted is general advertising in the sense of branding a site or making the public aware of a sites purpose and function. The difficulty comes in with a grey area that might not be apparent at first glance.

Specifically, we recommend that investment providers generally be able to advertise that a certain company, cause, or named investment – without advertising specifics of the investment itself. This would fall under “notification” rather than an inducement to buy. Using this would allow directories, press releases and mention on other sites where potential investors may be interested in learning more. We feel this wouldn’t constitute “advertising” as much as “notification” and should have a backlink to the originating site as a stipulation.

Advice

Investment advice is a tricky subject. The problems arise when differentiating between unbiased information and actual investment advice or recommendations. This is further compounded by the ability to shape each user’s experience on the Internet to shape visitor experiences and gain influence over their decision making.

When will information, such as about historical performance, be construed as advice or a recommendation? What about the selection process in the decision to back one offer and host that, over another, competing offer?  SEC needs to allow exceptions and guidance for platforms, and we are asking them, to reject and remove issuers that may be offensive such as tobacco, alcohol related or sexually related issuers.  How will that not be considered investment advise?

To a large extent we believe that free market forces will constrain this latter problem, with good investments attractive to intermediaries and poorer products less so. Transparency would be key and this implies an easy way for potential investors to access solid, relevant information.

One suggestion that would increase transparency, provide information and avoid unpermitted advice, would be a template requirement with stats visible across the board and presented in the same way. This would also be a clear target for regulation and an easily enforceable metric.

The JOBS Act needs interpretation of what the intentions of Congress was when drafting it.

We are working with SEC to translate and guide this crowd funding process towards an economical automated implementation.

Contributors

News Desk
The latest news, comment and analysis from our crypto news desk.