Issuers and Non-Issuer Transactions
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 The follow-the-money rule and regulator characters
- 1:27 Issuer definition: any person who issues or proposes to issue
- 2:05 Non-issuer transactions: not for the issuer's benefit
- 2:32 Primary market vs secondary market scrutiny
- 3:01 Special instruments: depositor or manager as issuer
- 3:42 The oil and gas ghost: no identifiable issuer
- 4:25 Scenario one: IPO and textbook issuer transaction
- 5:15 Scenario two: Iris sells on NYSE, non-issuer transaction
- 6:16 The secondary illusion: secondary offering vs secondary market
- 7:12 Issuer transaction does not mean automatic registration
- 7:40 Why the distinction changes Stan's entire rulebook
- 8:13 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- How the Uniform Securities Act (USA) defines an issuer: any person who issues or proposes to issue any security, where "person" includes corporations, partnerships, governments, and trusts
- Why non-issuer transactions are defined as any transaction not directly or indirectly for the benefit of the issuer, and how to apply the follow-the-money rule
- Which special instruments use depositor or manager as the issuer instead of the obvious entity: certificates of deposit for security, voting trusts, collateral trusts, and unit investment trusts (UITs) without a board of directors
- Why oil, gas, and mining interests have no identifiable issuer under the USA, and how to avoid the exam trap of picking a drilling company or manager
- How to distinguish primary market issuer transactions (initial public offerings (IPOs), follow-on offerings) from secondary market non-issuer transactions (routine exchange trades)
- Why a secondary offering is a non-issuer transaction even though the word "offering" sounds like a corporate event, since the proceeds go to the insider not the company
- Why identifying an issuer transaction does not automatically mean the security must be registered, since exemptions still apply
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