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by pmen
3574 days ago
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It sounds like you might be thinking of Title IV of the JOBS Act (Reg A fundraises, more details here: https://www.sec.gov/oiea/investor-alerts-bulletins/ib_regula...), which are akin to "mini IPOs" and are intended for later-stage companies. Republic operates exclusively under Title III of the JOBS Act, which was enacted in May of this year and is intended for early-stage companies. On deal terms, generally speaking it would be impractical for a startup to fundraise via equity crowdfunding if the hundreds or thousands of investors, each putting in as little as $10, were to have voting and information rights. The non-transferability component is actually a legal restriction put in place by the SEC, not a term that any companies raising on Republic have put in place. Each deal page has a discussion section, if you have questions for the founding team of each company, please do ask :) |
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Yeah, right. I get an annual report, a 10-K, and voting rights on every public stock for which I own at least one share.