Exempt Securities
Chapters in this video
- 0:00 The Stan analogy and the VIP pass framework
- 1:37 US and Canadian government securities
- 2:24 Foreign government bonds and the diplomatic relations test
- 2:59 Bank securities and the conduit trap
- 3:47 Insurance company exemptions and variable products
- 4:50 Railroad, public carrier, and public utility securities
- 5:10 Nonprofit exemptions and the anti-fraud Gotcha
- 5:42 Commercial paper and the three-legged stool test
- 7:19 Rapid-fire exam recap
What this video covers
- Why United States (US) government securities, municipal bonds, and revenue bonds are all exempt regardless of who sells them
- How Canadian government securities are always exempt, while other foreign government securities require current US diplomatic relations
- The bank securities exemption and the conduit trap: when certificates issued by a bank do NOT represent an interest in the bank itself
- Why insurance company stocks and bonds are exempt but variable annuities and variable life insurance must be registered
- The four regulatory conditions that grant railroad, common carrier, and public utility securities their exemption
- The strict three-part test for commercial paper: nine-month maximum maturity, $50,000 minimum denomination, and top-three rating
- Why exemption from registration never means exemption from anti-fraud provisions, and how NASAA tests this distinction
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