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by laser
3191 days ago
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Is that really how the law is technically phrased? I doubt it. You're telling me that if Jose does an ITO (Initial Taco Offering) to open his new taco joint, selling 1000 tacos to anyone that wants to eat one, and I complain to the SEC that I thought Jose's tacos would be worth more if I resold them tomorrow, then his tacos fail the Howey Test and are classified as securities? Obviously that's not the case, but are you saying that's only due to selective SEC enforcement, not because the law has a higher standard than "Even one investor complaining they thought they were going to make money"? |
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For your tacos to be securities, the company would have to be working in some capacity to give those tacos more value in the future. Since tacos expire, all reasonable taco investors know that their investment will go to $0 in the near future, therefore no expectation of profit.
It's amazing how broadly security is defined and enforced. The only examples I was able to discuss with the SEC that were not securities were when the asset being sold could not reasonably generate a profit and could not be transferred. Basically like selling a product or accepting a donation.
There is also securities case law where a company sold a security to a single person or very few people and they were sued successfully.