LD 509
pg. 65
Page 64 of 183 An Act To Adopt the Maine Uniform Securities Act Page 66 of 183
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LR 441
Item 1

 
generally follows the 1956 Act and RUSA. Rule 165 of the Securities
Act of 1933, which was adopted in 1999, allows the offeror of
securities in a business combination to make written communications
that offer securities for sale before a registration statement is
filed as long as specified conditions are satisfied.

 
RUSA Section 402(15)(ii) also required that a registration
statement be filed under this Act, but not yet be effective. By
eliminating the filing requirement this exemption will reach the
offer (but not the sale) of a security that is anticipated to be
a federal covered security by applying for listing on the New
York Stock Exchange or other exchange specified in Section
18(b)(1) of the Securities Act of 1933, but the listing and
federal covered security status has not yet become effective.

 
18. Section 202(17): Offerings when registration has been
filed, but is not effective under this [Act] and exempt from the
Securities Act of 1933: Prior Provisions: RUSA Section 402(16).
If a rule is adopted by the administrator a solicitation of
interest document must accompany a registration by qualification
as specified in Section 304(b)(13).

 
Oral offers may be made after a registration statement has
been filed, both before and after a registration statement is
effective.

 
This exemption does not operate unless the administrator
adopts a rule under 202(17)(B).

 
19. Section 202(18): Control transactions: Prior Provision:
RUSA Section 402(17). Until 1972 mergers and similar transactions
were not considered to involve sales and did not have to register
under the Securities Act of 1933. In 1972 the Securities and
Exchange Commission adopted Rule 145 defining many mergers and
similar transactions to be sales and abandoned its earlier "no
sale" doctrine. See 3 Louis Loss & Joel Seligman, Securities
Regulation 1262-1280 (3d ed. rev. 1999).

 
Because most merger and similar transactions require
shareholder approval and shareholders often have appraisal rights
if they choose to dissent, the potential for abuse is less than
in an offering of securities for cash. When appropriate the
administrator can deny, condition, limit or revoke this exemption
under Section 204. Section 202(18) does not follow the
requirement in RUSA Section 402(17) that written notice of the
transactions and a copy of the solicitation materials be given to
the administrator 10 days before the consummation of the
transaction and, that the administrator is empowered to disallow
the exemption within the next 10 days.


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