Legal Question in Investment Law in California

when must a borrower of funds register as a financial advisor

For a long time I have borrowed money

from a few family members (which I pay

interest on, above the monthly treasury

average rate, and file 10-99s each year

etc.) A promissory note documents

each loan and is kept up to date. I also

invest money in stocks, options,

property, etc, and have made my living

from that activity for the past two

decades. I have no professional

training, have never been involved in

the investment industry in any way

(When I did work I was a programmer.)

I am wondering if there is any limit to

the amount I can borrow, or the number

of loans, duration, or any other

threshold that might require me to

register or notify some agency to be in

full compliance of CA state and federal

laws. There are no charges or fees paid

between me and my debtors, just

simple interest compounded or paid out

monthly. I also have a few outstanding

loans to friends along the same lines.

Although it varies each year, less than

20% of my income has come from the

spread between what I make investing

that money and pay in interest on the

loans. I have refused more money until

I can find out what these limits are.


Asked on 9/14/06, 2:38 pm

1 Answer from Attorneys

Bryan Whipple Bryan R. R. Whipple, Attorney at Law

Re: when must a borrower of funds register as a financial advisor

I think there is a danger that the IOUs you are issuing to these "lenders" may be considered securities for the purpose of the Securities Act of 1933, as amended. There is a fuzzy line between an individual's borrowing money for personal purposes and giving an IOU to the lender, and a business borrowing money and issuing a bond. Where is the line? I think when the likelihood of repayment and/or payment of interest or profits depends upon the business success of the borrower, then the obligation (IOU, bond, note or whatever) becomes a security. The definition of a security nowadays has been greatly broadened by court decisions in favor of cheated (or unlucky) lenders (or, to take the courts' view, investors) and finding that the transaction was the issuance of a security and required either registration or issuance under a recognized exemption from the registration requirements.

Further, your borrowing-and-investing could be considered operating a mutual fund, which requires a different kind of compliance program.

It would be impossible in the scope of a couple of e-mail exchanges to evaluate your particular activity and advise you competently. I can't say with any certainty one way or another whather you are risking SEC or any other kind of enforcement, or private suits from a "lender." I do believe, however, that you should get competent advice from a securities lawyer that you can sit down with and go over your entire activity. I'm guessing it's a regulated activity and you need to find an exemption that fits and stay within its rules, including making necessary disclosures to your "lenders."

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Answered on 9/14/06, 4:39 pm


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