LD 509
pg. 5
Page 4 of 183 An Act To Adopt the Maine Uniform Securities Act Page 6 of 183
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LR 441
Item 1

 
(2) Nineteen new definitions were added to define "bank"
(Section 102(3)), "depository institution" (Section 102(5)),
"federal covered investment adviser" (Section 102(6)), "federal
covered security" (Section 102(7)), "filing" (Section 102(8)),
"institutional investor" (Section 102(11)), "insurance company"
(Section 102(12)), "insured" (Section 102(13)), "international
banking institution" (Section 102(14)), "investment adviser
representative" (Section 102(16)), "offer to purchase" (Section
102(19)), "place of business" (Section 102(21)), "predecessor
act" (Section 102(22)), "price amendment" (Section 102(23)),
"principal place of business" (Section 102(24)), "record"
(Section 102(25)), "Securities and Exchange Commission" (Section
102(27)), "self-regulatory organization" (Section 102(29)), and
"sign" (Section 102(30)). The growth in definitions is suggestive
of the increased complexity and detail of several revised
provisions in the new Act.

 
(3) Specific exemptions from securities registration are
broadened. Most significant is Section 202(13) which builds on a
new definition of institutional investors that parallels Rule
501(a) of the Securities Act of 1933, but with $10 million rather
than $5 million thresholds in Sections 102(11)(F) through (K),
and (O), and addresses specified employee plans, trusts, Internal
Revenue Code Section 501(c)(3) organizations, small business
investment companies licensed by the United States Small Business
Administration, private business development companies under
Section 202(a)(22) of the Investment Advisers Act, and other
institutional purchasers. The definition of institutional
investor also reaches qualified institutional buyers under Rule
144A(a)(i) of the Securities Act of 1933, major U.S.
institutional investors as defined in Rule 15a-6(b)(4)(i) of the
Securities Exchange Act of 1934, and federal covered investment
advisers acting for their own accounts. The new institutional
investor transaction exemption in Section 202(13) will also reach
other persons specified by rule or order of the administrator.

 
The limited offering transaction exemption in Section 202(14)
was broadened to reach 25 persons, in addition to those exempted
by the institutional investor exemption, on condition that the
transaction is part of a single issue, and other specified
conditions are satisfied.

 
If the SEC adopts a new definition of qualified purchaser, as
it has proposed under Rule 146(c) of the Securities Act of 1933,
there may ultimately be four preemptive or exemptive types of
provision applicable to the new Act: (1) the SEC qualified
purchaser provision; (2) Section 18(b)(4)(D) which provides
preemptive treatment for Rule 506 offerings under the Securities
Act of 1933; (3) specified investors in Section 202(13); and (4)
limited offerings in Section 202(14).


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