One of the interesting points that emerged from last week’s Sunshine Act meeting of the SEC Advisory Committee on Small and Emerging Companies was the following recommendation:
The U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission should facilitate and encourage the creation of a separate U.S. equity market or markets for small and emerging companies, in which investor participation would be limited to sophisticated investors, and small and emerging companies would be subject to a regulatory regime strict enough to protect such investors but flexible enough to accommodate innovation and growth by such companies.
In referencing “sophisticated investors,” the SEC is specifically referencing accredited investors. The SEC cannot make an exchange, but this recommendation suggests a willingness to help solve a big problem for small business. Small business equity is illiquid, and this fact hinders economic growth.