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Home » Categories » Business » Other Business » What is Rule 15c211 and Reverse Merger. » Printer Friendly

What is Rule 15c211 and Reverse Merger.

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Submitted Saturday, July 30, 2005
Joseph Quinones (308)
Genesis Corporate Advisors
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15c211 Was designed to allow fully reporting public companies to have their securities quoted on the Over-The-Counter Bulletin Board (“OTCBB") by filing some simple disclosure.

Rule 15C211 Under SEC Rule 15C211, a U.S. securities broker or dealer may not publish a quotation for any security unless certain information concerning the issuer is available and the broker or dealer has a reasonable basis for believing that the information is accurate. The information requirement is satisfied, in simple terms, if:

1) a Securities Act registration statement (F-6, F-1) has been filed within the last 90 days,

2) the issuer is complying with filing requirements and has in its records the issuer's most recent annual report,

3) the issuer is complying with Rule 12g3-2(b),

4) the broker or dealer has on record information relating to the issuer, its securities, its business, products and facilities. Management information, financial statements of the issuer and certain other data must also be on record.

Form 15C211, also known as Form 211, refers to the specific filing form a broker/dealer must provide containing the information necessary to publish a quotation on the company. For more information visit: www.genesiscorporateadvisors.com

Reverse merger: A reverse merger is a method by many of our small and mid-cap companies to initially go public, is the purchase of, and reverse merger into, an existing public shell company. This is inexpensive compared with conventional Initial public offerings (IPO). this is also a simplified fast track method by which a private company can become a public company.

In a reverse merger, an operating Private company merges with a public company that has little or no assets, nor known liabilities (the "shell"). In some rare instances, the shell may have some amount of cash remaining for investment into the new enterprise. The public corporation is called a "shell" since all that exists of the original company is its corporate shell structure and shareholders. The private company owners obtain the majority of the shell corporation's stock (usually 90-95%) through a new issue of stock for the private enterprise or asset.

The public corporation will normally change its name to the private company's name and elect a new Board of Directors which will appoint the officers. The public corporation will usually have a base of shareholders sufficient to meet the 300 shareholder requirement for eventual admission to quotation on the NASDAQ Small Cap Market or American Stock Exchange (if the private company's financial condition substantiates other NASDAQ or AMEX requirements), although some shells have as few as 35-50 shareholders, and are currently listed (or can apply for listing) on the OTC Bulletin Board or the NQB Pink Sheets.

For more information please visit: www.genesiscorporateadvisors.com

Joseph Quinones is President and founder of Genesis Corporate Advisors, prior to that he was President and founder of JDQ financial Group, Inc. a full service broker dealer which Mr. Quinones proceeded to build up from a one man operation to the point where it employed many traders, and advised numerous clients while generating millions in revenues...



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Comments on this article:


» left by grant from oregon (3 years 226 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
I check this out and you are wrong
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» left by John from Miami (3 years 186 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 5 out of 5
This is really helpful information, the author really understands his material and it has taught me something after being a Wall Street Investment banker for many years
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» left by Dean from LA (3 years 137 days ago.)
Reader Rating: 1 out of 5
This is not helpful at all. There are very inacurate statments in here
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