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EB-5 offerings are securities offerings and form part of a broader EB-5 capital strategy for real estate development. Therefore, developers must evaluate broker-dealer requirements before they begin marketing an EB-5 investment.
Many sponsors assume that if their project qualifies under Regulation D or Regulation S, they are fully compliant. However, offering exemptions determine whether the securities themselves must be registered. Broker-dealer rules determine who may solicit investors and how they may be compensated. These are separate regulatory issues.
Because of this distinction, distribution strategy should be defined before marketing begins.
Offering Exemptions vs. Broker-Dealer Registration
Most EB-5 projects rely on private offering exemptions. Developers often structure domestic offerings under Regulation D and offshore offerings under Regulation S. These exemptions allow issuers to avoid registering the securities with the SEC.
However, even when an offering qualifies for an exemption, individuals who actively solicit investors may still need to register as broker-dealers.
The key issue is conduct. If a person solicits investors, recommends the investment, negotiates terms, or receives compensation tied to the amount raised, regulators may view that activity as broker-dealer activity.
Therefore, developers must analyze not only the exemption they rely upon, but also the behavior and compensation structure of everyone involved in distribution.
When an EB-5 Issuer May Sell Without a Broker-Dealer
In certain limited circumstances, an issuer may sell its own securities without registering as a broker-dealer. However, this flexibility depends on strict conditions. This framework is commonly referred to through Rule 3a4-1
Officers and employees of the issuer may participate in sales activity if they meet specific regulatory requirements. Most importantly, compensation cannot resemble transaction-based commissions. When compensation ties directly to funds raised, broker-dealer concerns increase significantly.
Because these rules are fact-specific, developers should avoid assuming that internal personnel may freely solicit investors without regulatory review. Structure and compensation must align with securities law from the outset.
Marketing to Investors Inside the United States
Location plays a central role in compliance.
If an investor is physically present in the United States at the time of the offer or solicitation, U.S. securities laws apply to that transaction. This remains true even if the investor is a foreign national.
As a result, many EB-5 projects that target investors already residing in the United States under temporary visa categories must structure distribution carefully. Distribution strategy also depends on whether the project operates under a Direct or Regional Center EB-5 structure, as investor volume and marketing channels differ significantly.
Regulation S generally applies to offshore transactions. When marketing occurs within the United States, developers typically rely on Regulation D and must ensure that solicitation practices comply with domestic securities regulations.
Importantly, immigration status does not determine securities compliance. Physical location at the time of the offer does.
Transaction-Based Compensation: The Primary Trigger
The most significant broker-dealer trigger involves compensation tied to fundraising success.
If a person receives compensation based on the amount of capital raised, regulators often interpret that arrangement as broker-dealer activity. This principle applies regardless of whether the individual is labeled a consultant, advisor, finder, or marketing representative.
Consequently, developers should structure compensation arrangements carefully. Flat advisory fees differ materially from commission-based compensation. However, even flat fees may raise concerns if the individual performs active solicitation functions.
Because compensation structure and marketing conduct work together, distribution design should occur before agreements are finalized.
What a Registered Broker-Dealer Provides
A registered broker-dealer operates under regulatory supervision and provides a compliant channel for capital formation.
When an EB-5 project engages a broker-dealer, that firm typically:
Supervises communications and marketing materials
Reviews investor suitability standards
Oversees subscription procedures
Structures compensation within regulatory guidelines
Because broker-dealers operate under SEC and FINRA oversight, their involvement can reduce regulatory risk, particularly when marketing occurs within the United States.
For projects that anticipate domestic investor outreach, broker-dealer participation often provides the clearest compliance framework.
Practical Distribution Models in EB-5
Developers generally operate within one of three distribution models: offshore-only marketing, domestic U.S. marketing, or a hybrid approach.
Offshore marketing often relies on Regulation S structures and foreign migration networks. Domestic marketing requires Regulation D compliance and broker-dealer analysis. A hybrid model demands careful coordination between both frameworks.
Therefore, sponsors should identify their target investor geography before finalizing offering documents. Distribution geography influences regulatory obligations from the beginning.
Broker-Dealer Alignment and Distribution Infrastructure
Developers should begin with a straightforward analysis: Who will communicate with investors, and how will they be compensated?
Next, they should evaluate whether those activities trigger broker-dealer registration requirements. Finally, they should align the offering exemption and distribution pathway accordingly.
By addressing these questions before marketing begins, sponsors reduce enforcement risk and preserve the integrity of the raise.
Broker-dealer compliance is not a secondary consideration. It is a structural element of the overall EB-5 capital stack structure, including placement as senior debt, mezzanine financing, or preferred equity.
A Structured Approach to Broker-Dealer Compliance
For developers planning to market EB-5 offerings within the United States, broker-dealer alignment often becomes a necessary component of compliant distribution.
As a registered representative affiliated with a registered broker-dealer, we are positioned to assist developers in structuring offerings within an appropriate supervisory framework when U.S. investor solicitation is contemplated.
This affiliation allows us to evaluate distribution strategy early, coordinate offering review where required, and align compensation structures with regulatory expectations. Because broker-dealer oversight introduces supervision and documentation standards, early integration reduces the risk of restructuring during the raise.
Not every EB-5 project requires the same distribution model. However, when domestic outreach forms part of the capital plan, a registered framework provides clarity, stability, and regulatory discipline.
EB-5 Developer FAQs
Not always. However, if someone solicits investors and receives transaction-based compensation, broker-dealer registration may be required.
No. Regulation D addresses offering registration, not broker-dealer conduct.
In limited circumstances, issuer personnel may participate in sales, but compensation and solicitation activity must comply with securities regulations.
Active solicitation combined with transaction-based compensation is the primary trigger.
Yes. Marketing to investors physically present in the United States requires compliance with domestic securities regulations.
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