Venture Capitalists Sweat Out Possibility Of New Rules

from the raising-the-bar dept

As the SEC is considering new rules that would try to cut down on fraud happening in hedge funds is worrying some venture capitalists as well. Specifically, they're worried about the SEC setting up more stringent qualifications for the types of people allowed to invest in these sorts of funds. Right now, you're supposed to be an accredited investors ($1 million in assets or $200k/year salary), but there's some flexibility. While most limited partners in VC funds easily qualify even with a much higher bar, the VCs are worried about no longer being able to make exceptions. Specifically, VC firms usually like to let seasoned executives from certain companies invest, so that they can tap their expertise in helping their portfolio companies. They also like to "reward" executives within their portfolio companies by letting them invest as well. Of course, I wonder how raising this bar actually does anything at all to "prevent fraud". It seems to only limit fraud to folks who are even richer. Are we legislating that fraud is only okay if it's the very rich who get scammed? Or is the assumption that, the richer you are, the less likely you are to be tricked by a fraud?
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  • identicon
    Rick Colosimo, 12 Jun 2003 @ 3:02am

    No Subject Given

    Or is the assumption that, the richer you are, the less likely you are to be tricked by a fraud?

    That's exactly right. The US securities laws are based on proper disclosure, not substantive fairness. The general theory is that people with that much money are either smart enough to figure out what a good investment is or capable of hiring someone to figure it out for them.

    link to this | view in chronology ]

    • identicon
      Marc H. Nathan, 12 Jun 2003 @ 11:00am

      Re: No Subject Given

      Even the smartest people (who we all know aren't necessarily the richest people) will make mistakes if the they are given fraudulent information. Fraud is fraud, but there is difference between overly optimistic assumtions (a classic is the hockey stick five year projections) and cooking the books. Any good investor will tell you that they don't evaluate a deal based its profit, but based on their potential loss. Investing is not gambling, it's making an informed decision to put your money to work for you. Even bad investors sometimes get lucky, but to ban them from the game based on their current bank account flies in the face of a democratic capitalist system.

      link to this | view in chronology ]


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