Bringing Trust to the Private Markets
U.S private companies raised $4.5 trillion, compared to only $2.1 trillion raised by public companies, a gap widening for 6 years. The decline in public companies and the rise of private financing will drive a need for efficient secondary market trading of secret shares. Blockchain-enabled and globally compliant digital security is critical to the success of secondary markets for private shares.
Company Overview
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Pain (Problem)
Private capital markets are plagued by inefficient tools, fragmented processes, and high costs. Ad hoc and disconnected systems limit a company’s ability to manage a compliant business, access financing and provide liquidity to their investors. Decentralized data for regulated entities brings an increased risk of violations.
Existing blockchains were built on principles that are not compliant with securities regulations. The private capital markets are regulated and have more requirements than just KYC identity, compliance, and confidentiality. Most public blockchains were built for pseudonymity, censorship resistance, and transparency, and rely on probabilistic finality in settlement.
Solution
Our global infrastructure platform based on a permissioned blockchain to bring trust, security, and compliance to all stakeholders. KoreChain infrastructure is an all-in-one platform for the private markets that connects them to the entire private capital markets for financing and secondary market trading of digital securities while maintaining regulatory compliance.
An infrastructure that is operational
KoreChain's all-in-one infrastructure platform provides solutions for
- Companies
- Broker-dealers
- ATS Operations
- Transfer Agents/Share Registry
- IRA Custodian
- Bank
- ID AML
- Compliance
- Payment Processor
- Payment Gateway
- News Wire Dessimination
Market Size
The private markets include 450 million private companies who represent 70% of the world's GDP. In the USA and Canada, there are 43.1 million private companies. In 2022 alone, 5 million companies registered in the USA, the highest rate since 2009.
USA market opportunity 38 million private companies, 165,000 companies raise capital annually. In 2022, private companies raised $4.5 Trillion in capital, compared to only $1.2 Trillion raised by publicly listed companies. The private companies are supported by 3,460 FINRA broker-dealers and 70 Secondary Marketing Trading ATS.
Issuance Platform
FINRA Broker-Dealer
Escrow
SEC-Registered
Transfer Agent
Modal Version
The Team
FAQs
Once you have completed creating an account at our All-In-One Platform, you can download our FREE Mobile App for iOS and Android. This app allows you to manage your pending investment in our company, view your holdings once it is closed, and take advantage of opportunities to re-invest. The Mobile App will also provide you updates, our news releases, reports, and any upcoming shareholder meetings.
You can click here or scan the QR Code here.
To make a RegCF offering available to investors, a company must file with the Securities and Exchange Commission (“SEC”) a Form C, documenting basic information about the company and its offering. It is important to note that the SEC does not review the Form C, and therefore is not recommending and/or approving any of the securities being offered. Before making any investment decision, it is highly recommended that prospective investors review the Form C filed with the SEC (included in the company’s profile) before making any investment decision.
Title III of the JOBS Act outlines Reg CF, a type of offering allowing private companies to raise up to $5 million from all Americans. Prior capital raising options limited private companies to raising money only from accredited investors, historically the wealthiest ~2% of Americans. Like a Kickstarter campaign, Reg CF allows companies to raise funds online from their early adopters and the crowd. However, instead of providing investors a reward such as a t-shirt or a card, investors receive securities, typically equity, in the startups they back. To learn more about Reg CF and other offering types check out our blog and academy.
When you complete your investment, your money will be transferred to an escrow account where an independent escrow agent will watch over your investment until it is accepted by the issuer. Once the Issuer accepts your investment, and certain regulatory procedures are completed, your money will be transferred from the escrow account to the Issuer in exchange for your securities.
Non-accredited investors are limited in the amount that they may invest in a RegCF offering during any rolling 12-month period:
- If either the annual income or the net worth of the investor is less than $107,000, the investor is limited to the greater of $2,500 or 5% of his or her annual income or net worth.
- If the annual income and net worth of the investor are both greater than $107,000, the investor is limited to 10% of the greater of his or her annual income or net worth, to a maximum of $107,000.
- Accredited investors do not have any investment limits.
To make an investment, you will need the following information readily available:
- Personal information such as your current address and phone number
- Employment and employer information
- Net worth and income information
- Your accredited investor status
- Social Security Number or passport
- ABA bank routing number and checking account number (typically found on a personal check or bank statement) or debit card information, unless paying via a Wire transfer.
You will receive (at minimum) an annual report with updates from the Issuer to keep you informed about the progress of the company. This annual report includes important information that a company will want to share with its investors to keep them engaged and informed. In certain circumstances a company may terminate its ongoing reporting requirement if:
- The company becomes a fully-reporting registrant with the SEC
- The company has filed at least one annual report, but has no more than 300 shareholders of record
- The company has filed at least three annual reports, and has no more than $10 million in assets
- The company or another party purchases or repurchases all the securities sold in reliance on Section 4(a)(6)
- The company ceases to do business
Currently, there is no market or liquidity for these securities. Right now the Issuer does not plan to list these securities on a national exchange or another secondary market. At some point the Issuer may choose to do so, but until then you should plan to hold your investment for a significant period of time before a “liquidation event” occurs. A “liquidation event” is when the Issuer either lists their securities on an exchange, is acquired, or goes bankrupt.
You can view your portfolio of investments by setting up an account in our All-In-One Platform. You will receive a link and instructions on how to set up a complimentary account in the Investment Confirmation you will receive via email when you make the investment. If the offering closes successfully and you are accepted as a shareholder/investor, you may receive periodic updates from the Company. Please review the Form C for more details.
Comments
Wade Warren
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Mar ‘23
Jane Cooper
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Mar ‘23
Ronald Richards
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Mar ‘23