Thursday, October 24, 2013

Crowdfunding: Don't Start Your Engines Just Yet


Crowdfunding has landed with a thud! On Wednesday, the SEC issued 568 pages of proposed rules for Title III of the JOBS Act – aka crowdfunding. Embedded in it were 295 questions for interested parties and the public at large to comment on, ranging from how to calculate the $1 million per year limit on how much issuers can raise (ie. should that be net of fees? should other non-crowdfunded fundraising be included or exempted?) to the economic impact of the proposed rules (question #295). 

SEC commissioners weighed in on the historic moment, proclaiming it a step forward in a "bold experiment" that has "great potential" to unleash capital for the nation's small businesses, but one that will take some time to get right. Others interpreted the voluminous proposal as the SEC kicking the can further down the road while appearing to fulfill its duty to issue rules mandated in the JOBS Act (already more than ten months behind). 


While the details are sorted out, the broad outlines of crowdfunding remain the same: 


- Companies can raise a maximum of $1 million through crowdfunding in a 12-month period

- Investors whose income and net worth are less than $100,000 are limited to $2,000 or 5% of their income, whichever is greater, in aggregate crowdfunding investments over a 12-month period
- Investors whose annual income or net worth is greater than $100,000 may invest up to 10% of their income or net worth, not to exceed $100,000 in a 12-month period
- All crowdfunding transactions must take place on an SEC-registered intermediary - either a broker-dealer or a crowdfunding portal
- These intermediaries must take measures to educate investors and mitigate fraud
- Companies raising money on these platforms must provide basic financial information (the proposed rules require audited financials for offerings greater than $500,000)

So when can we expect mainstream investment crowdfunding to be ready for prime time? 

Not so fast. 

Wednesday's proposed rules kick off a 90-day comment period. At the end of the comment period, SEC staffers will study the comments and consider whether to recommend tweaks to the proposed rules to their bosses. Sara Hanks, an attorney and the CEO of CrowdCheck, notes that the end of the comment period does not imply any action on the part of the SEC – in fact, in practice, proposed rules often languish for many months. Given the controversy surrounding crowdfunding and the magnitude of the questions buried in the proposed Title III rules, this recommendation stage is likely to stretch on for at least three months, if not many more.

The next step would be for the SEC commissioners to formally adopt the rules (or reissue rules and start the process all over again, which is considered unlikely). Bottom line: final crowdfunding rules are not likely to be released until six months out, at the earliest. 

Add in some time for FINRA, the industry regulatory body, which must issue its own rules and guidance, and a registration period for crowdfunding portals, and mainstream crowdfunding will not be a reality until mid-2014 at best.

In the meantime, read the proposed rules here, and offer your own (constructive) comments here.

Wednesday, August 21, 2013

When Buying Local Doesn't Build Community Wealth

Buy local. Support local business. These are the rallying cries that community-boosters (including
myself) use all the time. When you spend money at a local business, the theory goes, more of that money circulates in the community, supporting other local businesses as well as charities and boosting the local tax base.

Except when it doesn't.

Maggie Anderson, the author of Our Black Year, opened my eyes to the fact that, in many neighborhoods—especially poorer Black ones—the 'local' businesses are not owned by people who live there, so the money spent at them flows right out of the community. African Americans account for 14% of the population, but they make up only 5% of business ownership in this country (and most of those businesses are sole proprietorships). The reasons are complex, but the reality is that, while African American buying power has surged, little of that spending is actually helping build wealth in Black communities. 

Anderson cites some startling statistics:

A dollar spent locally circulates nearly a month in an Asian American community before the money flows out.
In Jewish communities, it sticks around for about 20 days. 
White Anglo-Saxon Protestant neighborhoods enjoy a locally spent dollar for roughly 17 days. 
African American communities? Six hours
  
All neighborhoods have "leakage" — money that flows out of the community and into the hands of nonlocal business owners, chain stores, bankers, landlords, etc. But it's particularly acute in some Black neighborhoods. For every $100 spent in an "underserved Black community," about $95 leaves, says Anderson, citing a 2004 report. 

To call attention to the lack of Black-owned enterprises, she and her family spent a year trying to buy only from Black-owned businesses around their Chicago neighborhood. The results of this Empowerment Experiment, as they call it, are chronicled in her book. I won't be spoiling anything to say that it wasn't exactly a rousing success.  

Anderson's book is a reminder that not all neighborhoods are created equal, and that the 'local' movement must become more diverse (to its credit, the Business Alliance for Local Living Economies featured Anderson as a keynote speaker at its 2012 conference, where I found out about her project and book). 

So when I heard about the Kingonomics conference taking place this week in Washington, DC, I was intrigued. Timed to commemorate the 50th anniversary of the March on Washington, where Martin Luther King gave his enduring "I Have a Dream" speech, it brings together entrepreneurs, innovators, civil rights leaders, businesses and investors inspired by the economic philosophies of Dr. King. Yes, economic philosophies. As Kingonomics author and conference organizer Rodney Sampson explains, many people don't realize that Dr. King was very focused on economic issues, believing that without economic opportunity, people do not have the chance to pursue happiness. Before his death, King campaigned for an "economic bill of rights" and called upon the government to invest in rebuilding American cities.

"The modern day civil rights movement has evolved into an economic rights movement for all to participate," writes Sampson. To that end, the conference entails two days of entrepreneur bootcamps, capital raising education, crowdfunding and pitch competitions for entrepreneurs, capped by an "Emancipation of Capital" gala. 

This is where I get excited about the potential for crowdfunding to help minorities, women and other entrepreneurs too often cut off from traditional funding sources. At its best, crowdfunding is about democratizing access to capital, so that ideas get funded based on their merits, not on powerful connections or where you went to school. So here's to MLK's dream, and the dreams of entrepreneurs everywhere, to make a difference in the world. We just have to give them a chance. 


Monday, May 20, 2013

Show your supply chain? No sweat.


Photo courtesy of The Sweatshop Project 
The recent collapse of a garment factory in Bangladesh, which killed or injured thousands of low-wage workers, shined a harsh light on how and where much of our clothing is made. And working conditions aren't the only problem:  fashion often comes at a high cost to our health and the environment, with finishes, fabrics and dyes that involve a laundry list of toxic chemicals. In fact, consumer goods of all kinds—whether clothing or cosmetics or processed food—are the retail equivalents of the global financial system, characterized by long, complex and opaque supply chains that are hard for companies, much less consumers, to keep track of. That is, until some tragedy, scandal or recall brings the details to the surface (horse meat, anyone?).  

In the wake of the Bangladesh incident, companies from Nordstrom to Walmart have indicated they would take steps to make their supply chains more transparent. We've heard that before. But corporations have been slow to back up their promises. In the meantime, a new generation of socially-minded companies is showing the way.  

In North Carolina, T.S. Designs makes organic cotton t-shirts "from dirt to shirt" in the state. The organic cotton is grown, spun, knit, finished, sewn and printed all within 700 miles—compared to the 16,000 miles that a typical globally-sourced t-shirt travels. The t-shirts are also printed with water-based ink and no harsh chemicals. When T.S. Designs president Eric Henry set out on this mission, there was no organic cotton being grown in the Carolinas. But with the help of a $30,000 loan from Slow Money NC, Henry was able to persuade (and pay up front) a handful of cotton farmers to make the switch to organic. In late 2011, the state's first organic cotton crop was harvested and ginned. Henry also helped found Cotton of the Carolinas, a collaboration of farmers and manufacturers dedicated to growing, making, and selling its t-shirts in the Carolinas. Each t-shirt from the Coalition comes with a tag that lets you track the entire supply chain, from farm to finish.  

I was recently introduced to another supply chain pioneer, S.W. Basics, a small but ambitious Brooklyn startup that makes a line of wonderfully simple skin care products, each with just five or fewer ingredients. No scary, unpronounceable names, chemical fragrances or fillers made in a lab. Just pure, ethically-sourced ingredients like shea butter, avocado oil, rosewater, coconut butter, and sea salt. S.W.'s founder, Adina Grigore, says all of the ingredients are either certified organic, Fair Trade, or sourced from small, family farms. And she wants you to know! Grigore and her team have launched a Kickstarter campaign to help the company film and document its suppliers, from the family that sustainably harvests its witch hazel in the Ozarks to the small Iowa firm that makes its lip balms and the women's cooperative in Ghana that suppliers its shea butter. 

The idea, says Grigore, is to celebrate S.W.'s suppliers and help them perhaps attract more business so that they can thrive. But it's also about creating new standards for doing business and encouraging people to be curious about how their products are made.

"For me, it's about being truthful to what we're doing, and not in a way that's token, like putting our ingredients on the front label, but in a way that is completely transparent," she says. In other words, "Proof, not just words." 

Grigore believes that if supply chains were more transparent, people might make different purchasing decisions. After all, would you knowingly buy cosmetics that have lead or endocrine disruptors in them? Or a t-shirt made in a sweat shop? No wonder the big conglomerates are so slow in responding to pressure.

As consumers, we have power. In addition to buying local and ethical, we can demand information from the retailers and manufacturers whose products we choose to buy. Or not buy, as the case may be. 

Friday, April 5, 2013

Happy Anniversary, JOBS Act!

In case you missed it, today marks the one-year anniversary of the JOBS Act. For those assembled in the Rose Garden for that momentous signing and for millions of entrepreneurs who would benefit from the law, hopes were high. A year later, we're still waiting for key provisions of the Act, notably crowdfunding and (Title III) and the lifting of the general solicitation ban (Title II).

There's been plenty written about that in the days leading up to the one-year anniversary (see links below) and several events today to commemorate the one-year mark (I participated in one in NYC yesterday). But I am reminded of the words of Bill Gates, who sagely observed that when it comes to disruptive technologies, we tend to overestimate the change that will occur in the next two years and underestimate the change that will occur in the next ten.  The revolution, apparently, will wait. 

Happy anniversary JOBS!

http://www.forbes.com/sites/ryancaldbeck/2013/03/16/happy-first-birthday-jobs-act/
 
http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/on-small-business/for-brokerdealers-crowdfunding-presents-new-opportunity/2013/03/28/bb835942-8075-11e2-8074-b26a871b165a_story.html

http://www.inc.com/candace-klein/the-regulations-that-ate-crowdfunding.html

http://www.forbes.com/sites/devinthorpe/2013/04/03/anniversary-of-jobs-act-finds-investment-crowdfunders-champing-at-the-bit/

http://www.crowdsourcing.org/editorial/conference-to-bring-crowdfunding-leaders-to-silicon-valley/24856


Tuesday, February 19, 2013

Crowdfunders to SEC: Bring it On

I was in the Rose Garden that exhilarating, giddy day last April, when President Obama signed the JOBS Act into law. And I can tell you with relative certainty that everyone present, including the President, thought that it would be implemented by now. Instead, as we approach the one-year anniversary, key pieces of the JOBS Act —namely Title II and III, which eliminate the restrictions on advertising private securities and allow for investment-based crowdfunding, respectively— are still just a rosy dream. That's because the SEC, the agency charged with writing the rules that will govern these new provisions, has been moving at the speed of molasses.

Here's a not-very-well-guarded secret: the proposed rules for crowdfunding have been written by the SEC staff and finished for some time. What's holding it up? Well, apparently the commissioners have been sitting on the rules for reasons spanning wariness of leaving themselves open to criticism from opponents of crowdfunding, to turmoil at the agency: former SEC chairwoman Mary Schapiro resigned late last year. Elisse Walter — one of four remaining commissioners, was named interim chairwoman. Then President Obama nominated Mary Jo White to head the agency, although she has yet to take over the role. In the meantime, it's a power vacuum. For crowdfunding advocates and startups, it's like waiting for Godot.

And that's a shame, because the delay is holding back regulatory progress that could deliver much needed relief to small businesses seeking capital and begin to bring the transformational power of the Internet and social networks to a broken financial system.

It's against this backdrop that some of the leaders of the nascent crowdfunding industry decided to take a stand. This morning, the Crowdfunding Professional Association staged a press conference at the National Press Club in Washington, before heading off to meet with various officials in the Office of Science & Technology Research, Treasury and, yes, SEC. Their aim, it seems, was to dispel some of the misperceptions about crowdfunding and put pressure on the SEC to act.

One of those misperceptions is that crowdfunding is about get-rich-quick schemes. Instead, speaker after speaker talked of helping Main Street businesses. Woody Neiss of Crowdfund Capital Advisors summed it up when he said that crowdfunding is not about "finding the next Facebook" — Silicon Valley does a robust job of that already. It's about finding and funding "the next 1 or 10 or 100,000 Main Street startups" that will create jobs and help build strong and prosperous communities. "It's social media meets community finance," he said.

Readers of this blog and my book will know that this is long what I have been preaching. To me, crowdfunding makes the most sense when there are social bonds and relationships that connect investors and entrepreneurs. As Warren Buffet has long advised: it makes sense to invest in what you know!

Crowdfunding is also an opportunity to take a broken financial system and make it better. To wit: Sarah Hanks, a former securities and corporate lawyer who is now the CEO of CrowdCheck, is offering a private market solution that addresses regulators' fraud and risk concerns. Her disclosure and due diligence system walks investors through the investment process, presenting them relevant information in plain understandable English. Compare that with the typical phone book-sized prospectus filled with legalese that no one in their right mind reads. "We've thrown that out the window," says Hanks. "The best disclosure is the kind that someone is actually reads and understands."

Crowdfunding is in its infancy and will continue to evolve to address market needs. As Chance Barnett, founder of Crowdfunder.com pointed out, Crowdfunding 1.0 was about transactions, often undertaken on impulse. But with the JOBS Act, we're on the cusp of Crowdfunding 2.0, which will be based on building long term relationships and community ecosystems.

In a world of speculation and short term trading, that is something to celebrate. That is, if the SEC ever makes a move.




Monday, January 7, 2013

The Real Risk With Crowdfunding

When the JOBS Act was signed into law last April, entrepreneurs were elated, even giddy, at the prospects. They and other supporters saw it as a democratizing force that could unlock new sources of capital for job-creating entrepreneurs, boost the economy and give Wall Street-wary investors a profitable alternative. It was one of those disruptive innovations that comes along once a generation and radically transforms the competitive landscape. It was so potentially revolutionary that pundits and financial pros alike predicted it would put many venture capitalists and banks out of business—in other words, exactly the sort of game-changing opportunity that makes entrepreneurs dream big.  

Well, ten months later, the enthusiasm has cooled. Not for the potential of crowdfunding, but for the realistic chances that it will be enacted anytime soon and in a form that honors the original intent of legislators to ease the bottlenecks that prevent so many entrepreneurs and small business owners from obtaining the capital they need to grow, hire and thrive. The SEC, which was charged with writing the rules that will govern the nascent crowdfunding industry by year-end, has missed that deadline (not surprisingly–the agency is concerned about the potential for fraud and has a lot on its plate already). Most people now believe true investment crowdfunding will not get underway until 2014. At the same time, it appears likely that the rules will require the new crowdfunding portals to be regulated much like conventional broker-dealers—in other words, more Merrill Lynch than eBay, as one observer put it. For better or for worse, crowdfunding may turn out to be a game not for idealistic entrepreneurs but for well-capitalized investment pros. 

As I wrote in my recent feature for the New York Times, despite the uncertainty, the outlines of a new industry are beginning to take shape, and with it a glimpse of what a crowdfunding future might look like: promising young companies able to get funding from people who  believe in them, regardless of those investors' net worth; new jobs being created by the availability of growth capital; and more broadly shared prosperity and economic opportunity. Sure, there is a risk of fraud and loss with crowdfunding. But then, that takes place every day on Wall Street. As Thom Ruhe, vice president for entrepreneurship at the Kauffman Foundation, told me, with the economy stuck in limbo, the bigger risk to the economy is to do nothing at all.