Chapter 5 Answers and Explanations
1. A – A bank offering CDs to their customers. Bank CDs being offered to customers are not considered securities transactions that state regulators oversee. They would be regulated by the appropriate banking regulators. However, a bank selling shares of ownership that will trade in the open market is considered an issuance of securities that is subject to regulation. Likewise, a corporation raising money through the sale of bonds and a small business (regardless of the size) raising money by selling ownership to the public are both considered a transaction in which securities are issued and are subject to regulation.
2. D – A commodities future. Commodities futures and insurance contracts that do not have a variable component (where a portion of the value is invested in the markets) are not considered securities. Publicly traded stocks, bonds, and options are all considered securities.
3. D – I, II, III, and IV. Registration statements contain all the relevant information regarding a security being issued, including the type of security (stock, bond, etc.), the quantity, the amount that will be raised, and the appropriate contact info.
4. B – Qualification. When a security issuer has no previous information on file about a specific security, they must start from scratch and provide a large amount of info to a state’s administrator. Registration by coordination allows a streamlined