Rule 144: Sale of Restricted or Control Securities - NerdWallet (2024)

MORE LIKE THISInvestingEmployee Equity

Depending on your role within a company, you may have acquired restricted or control securities. If you no longer want some or all of them, don’t worry, they’re not impossible to offload. However, you’ll need to follow Rule 144 requirements.

What is Rule 144?

Rule 144 provides an exemption to the Securities Act of 1933 registration requirements, permitting the sale of restricted or control securities in the public market when certain conditions are met.

Securities Act of 1933

The purpose of the Securities Act of 1933 is to ensure that investors receive the necessary information to make informed decisions when purchasing securities and to eliminate fraud during the sale of securities, which is why it’s known as the “truth in securities” law.

In order to achieve these objectives, the law requires that securities are registered with the Securities and Exchange Commission before being sold. However, not all securities must be registered, which is where Rule 144 comes into play for restricted and control securities.

Restricted securities

Restricted securities refer to securities obtained from an issuing company or its affiliate through unregistered or private sales, such as:

  • Private placements. When securities are sold privately to a limited group of investors, rather than through the open, public markets.

  • Regulation D offerings. Regulation D offers various exemptions that allow some companies to offer securities without registration.

  • Equity compensation. Equity- or stock-based compensation benefits can result in employees having restricted securities.

  • Startup financing. Budding startup companies often offer shares in exchange for seed money from angel investors. These shares can be considered restricted securities.

Control Securities

Control securities refer to securities held by an affiliate, also known as a control person. This is someone with the ability to influence or control an issuing company such as a director, executive or large shareholder.

AD

Rule 144: Sale of Restricted or Control Securities - NerdWallet (1)

Hire a Pro: See your Top 3 Matches

Get matched with fiduciaries, financial advisors and financial planners who will work with you to achieve your wealth goals. Book your free consultation today.

Find A Financial Advisor

via Zoe Financial

Paid non-client promotion

Rule 144 Conditions

There are several conditions to meet when you sell unregistered, restricted or control securities under Rule 144 in order to attain a “safe-harbor” exemption, meaning that you’ll be protected from penalty or liability so long as specific guidelines are followed.

Holding period requirement

Before selling any restricted securities, you must hold them for a certain time period. The time frame depends on whether the issuing company is subject to reporting requirements under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. For those considered a “reporting company” for at least 90 days, securities must be held for a minimum of six months. Those considered a “non-reporting company” for at least 90 days must be held for more than one year.

Note that this holding period requirement isn't applicable to control securities, although they may be subject to other restrictions under Rule 144.

Current public information requirement

To sell unregistered securities, issuer information that is current and sufficient must be available to the public. For instance, a “reporting company” must file all periodic reports required by the Exchange Act for the year prior to the sale. A “non-reporting company” has less stringent reporting requirements but still must have adequate information publicly available, such as its financial statements along with information surrounding the nature of its business and the identities of its directors and officers.

Notice of proposed sale requirement

All affiliates are required to file a Form 144, notifying the SEC if the sale of securities within any three-month period exceeds either 5,000 shares or a total dollar amount of $50,000.

Volume restriction requirement

When an affiliate sells the issuer’s equity securities, whether restricted or not, there are limitations on the number of securities sold within any three-month time frame. Securities sales cannot exceed the greater of the following:

  • 1% of the shares outstanding of the same share class as the ones being sold (according to the most recent report of the issuer).

  • The average weekly reported trade volume of the security during the four calendar weeks preceding the sales notice (either reported by the automated quotation system of a registered securities association or on all national securities exchanges).

Trading requirements

Affiliate sales must be conducted as normal, routine trading transactions. This means that neither the broker nor the affiliate (seller) can solicit others to purchase the securities, and brokers cannot be paid more than a typical brokerage commission.

Are you subject to Rule 144?

Which applies to you?

Restricted securities

Unrestricted securities

Non-affiliate

  • If you’ve held the restricted security for over a year, you can disregard Rule 144 conditions when selling securities.

  • If you’ve held the restricted security for over 6 months but less than a year, and the issuer is considered a "reporting company," you can sell securities if the issuer fulfills the current public information requirement.

Not subject to Rule 144 conditions.

Affiliate

Must comply with all Rule 144 conditions.

Must comply with all Rule 144 conditions with the exception of the holding period requirement.

If you must follow Rule 144, a good rule of thumb is to check with your broker to ensure that they accept restricted and/or control securities and can handle the Rule 144 requirements should you wish to sell. To do so, your broker will likely need to coordinate with the issuer’s general counsel to verify compliance with any trading windows and provide consent to remove the restrictive legend (a stamp or statement on a stock certificate that securities are unregistered or restricted) from your securities, if applicable. Your restricted securities cannot be sold until the restrictive legend is removed. Your broker may also be able to guide you on completing and submitting your Form 144 when completing your sale transaction.

Track your finances all in one place

Link all your assets and debts for a full financial picture.

Register

Rule 144: Sale of Restricted or Control Securities - NerdWallet (2)

Rule 144: Sale of Restricted or Control Securities - NerdWallet (2024)

FAQs

What is the Rule 144 selling restricted and control securities? ›

Rule 144 provides an exemption and permits the public resale of restricted or control securities if a number of conditions are met, including how long the securities are held, the way in which they are sold, and the amount that can be sold at any one time.

How to calculate Rule 144 volume? ›

If a company's stock is listed on a stock exchange, only the greater of 1% of total outstanding shares, or the average of the previous four-week trading volume can be sold. For over-the-counter stocks, only the 1% rule applies.

How does restricted stock differ from control stock in a Rule 144 sale? ›

A key difference in the treatment of restricted and control securities under Rule 144 is the requirement of a holding period, which is applicable only to restricted securities under Rule 144(d).

What is the difference between restricted securities and control securities? ›

Restricted securities may be offered as part of an employee benefit plan, but they have other implications when acquired by another individual or entity. Controlled stock provides a level control to an organization's business affiliate.

Who is required to file Form 144? ›

What is SEC Form 144? Form 144 is a mandatory SEC filing for those intending to sell restricted or control securities. Restricted securities stem from private sales, whereas control securities belong to affiliates such as directors or large shareholders.

When an investor is selling shares of Rule 144 restricted stock after holding? ›

Answer. The buyers of Rule 144 restricted stock which an investor is selling after holding the required length of time are purchasing stock that are subject to resale restrictions. Rule 144 allows for the sale of restricted and control securities if certain conditions are met.

What is the difference between control and restricted stock? ›

Restricted stock rules apply because the stock is not registered with the SEC. Control stock rules apply because they're affiliate-owned shares. When this is the case, both sets of rules apply simultaneously.

What is tacking for Rule 144? ›

Rule 144 contains “tacking” provisions in specified situations that allow holders to count other holding periods—either of prior owners of the securities or of different securities owned by the holders—to satisfy their holding period requirement.

What is the difference between Rule 144 and 701? ›

Rule 701 is an exemption for the offer and sale of unregistered securities by the issuer company. The exemption that applies to sales of unregistered stock by the shareholder is Rule 144.

Is it better to sell stock options or restricted stock? ›

Stock Options or RSUs: Which Is Better? These two forms of stock compensation have their pros and cons. Stock options may be riskier than RSUs, but options allow you to time the tax while RSUs don't.

What happens when you sell restricted stock? ›

Selling restricted stock units depends on whether your company is publicly or privately traded. Once you have met the conditions of a restricted stock unit package, you receive those shares entirely. They are yours and you can buy or sell them subject to the same conditions as any other shares of stock.

What is the difference between Rule 144 and 144A? ›

Rule 144 allows selling restricted and controlled securities to accredited and non-accredited investors. Rule 144A is more restrictive, as it permits sales solely to Qualified Institutional Buyers (QIBs) with at least $100 million in assets under management.

What is the Rule 144 for dummies? ›

Rule 144 provides an exemption to the Securities Act of 1933 registration requirements, permitting the sale of restricted or control securities in the public market when certain conditions are met.

What are examples of restricted securities? ›

Restricted Securities

Securities include common and preferred stock, debt securities (but not all debt is a security), options and warrants. Common stock is generally the only security of an issuing company that is traded in the open market, and is therefore the focus of Rule 144 opinions.

What is the purpose of restricted securities? ›

Restricted stocks are nontransferable shares issued to employees as a form of compensation. These stocks typically have conditions about the timing of their sale or transfer during a vesting period.

What is the Rule 144 for insider selling? ›

Private placement investors purchase restricted (unregistered) stock. Rule 144 requires restricted stock to be held by its investors for 6 months before resale. After this time period, the investor can sell their shares.

What are the requirements for Rule 144A resale? ›

Rule 144A allows purchasers of such securities to resell those securities if: (1) the sale is to a qualified institutional buyer (QIB); (2) the seller takes affirmative steps to ensure that the buyer is aware that the seller relies on Rule 144A to sell their security; (3) the securities are not of the same class as ...

What is the rule of 144 in finance? ›

Rule of 144 tells you how much time will it take for your amount deposited in a scheme to quadruple. Suppose you are investing in a scheme which is giving interest at the rate of 6 per cent, then 144/6 = 24, i.e., your amount will become four times in 24 years.

What is the rule 145 for restricted stocks? ›

Restricted securities need to meet certain requirements before they can be sold. Under a different rule called Rule 144, securities owned by issuers remain restricted. This restriction is waived by Rule 145, which allows such shares to be sold if they are not more than one percent of the total outstanding shares.

Top Articles
Latest Posts
Article information

Author: Jonah Leffler

Last Updated:

Views: 6460

Rating: 4.4 / 5 (65 voted)

Reviews: 80% of readers found this page helpful

Author information

Name: Jonah Leffler

Birthday: 1997-10-27

Address: 8987 Kieth Ports, Luettgenland, CT 54657-9808

Phone: +2611128251586

Job: Mining Supervisor

Hobby: Worldbuilding, Electronics, Amateur radio, Skiing, Cycling, Jogging, Taxidermy

Introduction: My name is Jonah Leffler, I am a determined, faithful, outstanding, inexpensive, cheerful, determined, smiling person who loves writing and wants to share my knowledge and understanding with you.