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Reverse Merger -- How It Works
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How to Avoid Problems in Securities Offerings______ If
you are going public, making an initial public offering with an IPO or a reverse
merger, or perhaps raising money with a private placement memorandum, or writing
a stock offering of any kind, you may be surprised to find just how useful this
article will be. This is written to provide the benefit of what I have learned
over the years. It does not have all the answers but you may be surprised to
find some very valuable and usable answers here. Rule
1. Make money for the investors. I have never seen anyone get sued bu an
investor for making money. However,
everyone believes they are going to make money for the investors and everyone,
like it or not, runs into unforeseen difficulties. Therefore, you had better
follow all the other rules to protect yourself. First,
when in doubt, disclose it. If you are wondering, if you find yourself
conflicted about disclosing something, you had better disclose it. The
corollary to this rule is to search diligently for all possible risk factors and
disclose them thoroughly. A good drill to improve your business is to take apart
your business aspect by aspect and see what would happen if the worst happened.
You can then see clearly what your risks are. Find things that went wrong for
others. Try to find the unexpected. The recent financial crisis shows us that
there were many high paid managers, sophisticated Wall Street executives, who
did not anticipate their risks. Their companies would be better off if they had
seen what was coming. Real disaster stories usually start with the following
words: “Nobody had ever seen anything like this happen before, but
……….” Second,
make a document for everything. You should take every line, every sentence, of
your disclosure document and have a piece of paper to back up that assertion and
prove it is true. Third,
reduce everything to a writing. When you take a corporate action, whether it is
the board of directors, shareholders, corporate officers, a contact with a
customer, employee or suppler, if it is important, make a written record of it. Fourth,
keep these records in a safe place. Then make duplicate copies and keep them in
a safe place. You never know what disaster – be it a hurricane, terrorist
attack, or worse, a disgruntled ex-employee covering his crimes – might befall
you. The only thing that will save your butt is having those files where nobody
can mess with them. Having more than two copies is recommended. Fifth,
take all this paper and make files out of it, pdf files will do nicely, and keep
the files electronically so they are easy to copy and send it to large investors
for due diligence and in the event of litigation. Put them into a directory on
your hard drive nicely organized so they are easy to search and easy to access.
Back all this up and keep the backup(s) in a separate and safe place. Sixth,
get legal opinions on everything that might have a question in it. Paper the
file so you can show what you did and why you did it. Resolve issues as they
come up. Seventh,
do not just strictly comply with the rules, be more ethical than the rules. Now
this may shock you, but the securities regulators have been known to change the
rules mid-stream and never to make them less strict. If you have been riding the
ragged edge of aggressive compliance with the rules, you may soon find that the
ground has been cut out from under you. The entire history of securities
regulation has been for more and more regulations with tighter and tighter
standards. Do not get caught out in the cold. Go beyond the rules. Remember,
the securities laws are what we used to call in law school a “Gotcha.”
A Gotcha is a set of rules that are so vague and complex that nobody can
comply with them. This gives the regulators wide discretion (needed given the
deviousness of some crooks) to nail who they want to nail. So when they see
something they don’t like, they can swoop down on it and yell “Gotcha!” Finally,
here is a good rule of thumb. Just pretend that your intended investor is in the
room with you. What would he think if he knew all that you know? How would he
react to what you are doing and saying? If you were the investor, is this how
would you like to be treated? Having this imaginary person looking over your
shoulder all the time is a good guide. In fact, you can pretend that there is a
plaintiff’s attorney, a judge and 12 jurors right there with you! Now
you can look forward to finding yourself have the cool confidence of an angel
with four aces and after having raised your money, look back on this article and
your carefully created documents as being the start of it all. It is good to be
able to sleep at night, isn’t it? So be sure to get the best advisors on your
team. I trust that these rules will be of use to you as they have been to me. The author, John Lux, has been an OTC market maker in new issues, shells and other companies, a security analyst, an investment banker, and attorney. He is a principal in several venture companies and private equity funds. How can you learn more about reverse mergers? Contact John Lux at mailto:lux.investor@gmail.com
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Send mail to mailto:lux.investor@gmail.com with
questions or comments about this web site. Reverse Merger Info
Copyright © 2006 John Lux
Last modified: November 30, 2008
Contact John to have all your questions answered about reverse mergers without obligation in a friendly, relaxed manner.
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