Private Placement

Laws & Regulations High Relevance

An offering of unregistered securities to a limited group of investors that is exempt from SEC registration requirements, primarily conducted under Regulation D. Most commonly structured as Rule 506(b) offerings (no general solicitation, up to 35 sophisticated investors plus unlimited accredited investors) or Rule 506(c) offerings (general solicitation permitted, only verified accredited investors). Securities sold are restricted and subject to resale limitations.

Example

A technology startup raises $25 million through a private placement under Rule 506(b) by selling equity to 15 venture capital firms (accredited investors) and 10 sophisticated angel investors without any public advertising. The company files Form D with the SEC and provides each investor with a private placement memorandum detailing risks and financial projections.

Common Confusion

Private placements are exempt from registration requirements but NOT exempt from anti-fraud provisions - issuers must still provide accurate disclosures and cannot make false statements. Additionally, the exemption from registration does not mean the securities can be freely resold; they are restricted securities subject to holding periods and Rule 144 resale limitations.

How This Is Tested

  • Distinguishing between registered public offerings and unregistered private placements based on Regulation D exemptions
  • Identifying which investors qualify to participate in private placements (accredited vs. sophisticated investors)
  • Understanding resale restrictions on privately placed securities and Rule 144 requirements
  • Recognizing the difference between registration exemption and fraud exemption
  • Determining when general solicitation is permitted (Rule 506(c) only) versus prohibited (Rule 506(b))

Regulatory Limits

Description Limit Notes
Rule 506(b) - Maximum non-accredited investors 35 sophisticated (but non-accredited) investors Plus unlimited accredited investors; no general solicitation or advertising permitted
Rule 506(c) - Investor requirements Only accredited investors (must be verified) General solicitation and advertising permitted; unlimited number of investors
Rule 504 - Small offering exemption $10 million maximum in 12-month period Fewer investor restrictions; may allow general solicitation in some cases
Form D filing requirement Within 15 days of first sale Required for all Regulation D offerings; filed electronically with SEC
Typical holding period for restricted securities Minimum 6 months (often 12 months) Before resale under Rule 144; securities bear restrictive legend
Accredited investor income threshold (individual) $200,000+ annually (past 2 years) Or $300,000+ joint income; must expect same level in current year
Accredited investor net worth threshold $1,000,000+ (excluding primary residence) Alternative qualification to income threshold

Example Exam Questions

Test your understanding with these practice questions. Select an answer to see the explanation.

Question 1

David, an investment adviser, has a client named Patricia who owns a successful medical practice and earns $280,000 annually. Patricia has $850,000 in investable assets and a home worth $1.2 million with a $400,000 mortgage. A private equity fund is offering investment opportunities through a private placement memorandum and requires all investors to be accredited. The fund promoter is advertising the opportunity on LinkedIn and requiring income verification. Can David recommend this investment to Patricia?

Question 2

Which of the following accurately describes the primary difference between a private placement and a registered public offering?

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Question 3

A real estate development company conducts a private placement under Rule 506(b), raising capital from investors between January 15, 2026 and March 30, 2026, with the first sale occurring on January 15. The company accepts investments from 12 accredited investors, 28 sophisticated but non-accredited investors, and 8 additional investors who are neither accredited nor sophisticated. By what date must the company file Form D with the SEC, and is the offering compliant with Rule 506(b) investor limits?

Question 4

All of the following statements about private placement offerings are accurate EXCEPT

Question 5

An investment adviser is reviewing a private placement opportunity for potential client recommendations. The offering is conducted under Regulation D Rule 506(c), advertised through online platforms, and requires $100,000 minimum investment. The issuer provides a private placement memorandum and requires investors to provide tax returns and W-2 forms. Which of the following statements about this offering are accurate?

1. The offering can use general solicitation and advertising because it is structured under Rule 506(c)
2. Only accredited investors can participate in this offering
3. The issuer must verify accredited investor status through reasonable steps like reviewing financial documents
4. The offering is exempt from state securities registration in all 50 states

💡 Memory Aid

Think of private placements like an exclusive VIP club: You need a membership pass (accredited/sophisticated investor status), the club follows special rules (Regulation D exemption), and once you're in, you can't transfer your membership to others (restricted securities). Remember: Private = VIP-Only with No Transfers.

Related Concepts

This term is part of these clusters:

Where This Appears on the Exam

This term is tested in the following Series 65 exam topics:

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