Regulation D — Private Placement Exemptions

What It Is

Regulation D (17 CFR 230.501-508) provides exemptions from SEC registration under the Securities Act of 1933. Rules 506(b) and 506(c) are the two main exemptions used by private funds to sell securities (LP/membership interests) without a public offering registration.

Rule 506(b)

  • No general solicitation or advertising. You cannot publicly market the fund. All investor contacts must come through pre-existing substantive relationships.
  • Up to 35 non-accredited investors may participate, but in practice funds accept only accredited investors to avoid the enhanced disclosure requirements (audited financials, offering memorandum with specific disclosures similar to a registered offering).
  • Unlimited accredited investors.
  • Self-certification accepted. Investors can self-certify accredited status via questionnaire — no independent verification required.
  • Preempts state blue sky laws (no state-level registration of the offering, though notice filings like Form D are still required in most states including California).

Rule 506(c)

  • General solicitation and advertising permitted. You can publicly market the fund (website, social media, conferences).
  • All purchasers must be accredited investors. No non-accredited investors allowed.
  • Issuer must take reasonable steps to verify accredited status. Self-certification is NOT sufficient. Acceptable verification methods:
    • Tax returns or W-2s for the prior two years (income test)
    • Bank/brokerage statements, credit report (net worth test)
    • Written confirmation from a registered broker-dealer, SEC-registered investment adviser, licensed CPA, or attorney
    • For existing investors in the fund who previously qualified, updated certification may suffice

Korean Investor Considerations

  • Korean investors residing outside the US can qualify as accredited investors under the same net worth/income tests. There is no citizenship requirement for accredited investor status.
  • For investors solicited outside the US, Regulation S may also apply (see Regulation S).
  • Under 506(b), pre-existing relationship must exist before any fund discussion. Building relationships through Korean business networks or personal introductions is fine; cold-calling or mass emails to Korean investor lists is not.

Accredited Investor Thresholds (2024+)

TestIndividualJoint with Spouse
Income$200,000+ in each of the two most recent years, with reasonable expectation of same$300,000+ jointly
Net Worth$1,000,000+ excluding primary residenceSame, jointly
Professional CredentialsSeries 7, 65, or 82 license holdersN/A
Knowledgeable EmployeesOf the private fundN/A
Entity$5,000,000+ in assets, or all equity owners are accreditedN/A

Form D Filing

  • File Form D with the SEC within 15 days after the first sale of securities.
  • State notice filings required in states where investors reside. California requires filing via the Department of Financial Protection and Innovation (DFPI). Fees vary by state.
  • Form D is a brief notice filing (not a registration). It discloses basic fund information, exemption relied upon, and amount sold.
  • Amendments: File an amendment annually and when material information changes.

Action Items for Palace Fund

  1. Choose 506(b) or 506(c). For a small fund raising from known contacts, 506(b) is simpler — no verification burden, no advertising restrictions to worry about since you are raising from personal network.
  2. Document pre-existing relationships (for 506(b)). Keep records of when and how you met each investor, and that the relationship predates any fund discussion.
  3. Prepare accredited investor questionnaire. For 506(b), a self-certification questionnaire in the subscription agreement is sufficient. For 506(c), implement a verification process.
  4. File Form D within 15 days of first closing.
  5. File state notice filings in California and any other state where investors reside.
  6. Do not mix approaches. If you start under 506(b), do not engage in general solicitation. Switching to 506(c) mid-raise is theoretically possible but practically complicated.