Registration Right

Registration Right

A registration right is a right entitling an investor who owns restricted stock to require that a company list the shares publicly so that the investor can sell them. One type of registration rights — known as demand rights — allows investors to force a company to go public. Other clauses included are the termination of registration rights for investors and establishing responsibility for registration payment to the company's management. The company may prevent registration rights from being enacted for several years, especially if the company is in the early stages of raising funds. Piggyback rights allow investors to have their shares included in a registration that is currently in the planning stages by the company.

Registration rights, if exercised, can force a privately-held company to become a publicly-traded company.

What Is Registration Right?

A registration right is a right entitling an investor who owns restricted stock to require that a company list the shares publicly so that the investor can sell them. Registration rights, if exercised, can force a privately-held company to become a publicly-traded company.

Registration rights, if exercised, can force a privately-held company to become a publicly-traded company.
One type of registration rights — known as demand rights — allows investors to force a company to go public.
Piggyback rights, another type, allow investors to have their shares included in a liquidity event.

Understanding Registration Rights

Registration rights are usually assigned when a private company issues shares in order to raise money. In practice, registration rights held by a group of minority investors seldom come into play. The majority block of shareholders typically decides if or when the company goes public.

Registration rights can help investors holding private shares gain access to the broader market to sell their shares. Early investors may have shorter time horizons than company founders for a liquidity event and thus may wish to exercise these registration rights.

However, exercised rights can potentially have significant impacts on a company. A private company would have to go through the initial public offering (IPO) filing process, which is often expensive, perhaps premature for the principals of the firm and its shareholders, or too dilutive. Employees would have to dedicate time to organizing material required for the SEC Form S-1 filing instead of focusing on day-to-day business operations. The IPO might also wind up reaching the market at an inopportune time (suboptimal market conditions), which could lead to the share price being lower than desired.

Rights are typically negotiated when privately-held shares are purchased. Typical negotiation points include the number of rights allotted to the investor, with management likely preferring fewer rights due to IPO expenses. The company may prevent registration rights from being enacted for several years, especially if the company is in the early stages of raising funds. This prevents the company from being pushed to go public before it has operated long enough to be stable.

It is in the company’s interest to limit the effect of registration rights.

Piggyback and Demand Rights

Registration rights take the form of either "piggyback" or "demand." Piggyback rights allow investors to have their shares included in a registration that is currently in the planning stages by the company. Piggyback rights generally do not cause issues for a firm.

Demand rights are the type of registration rights described in the preceding sections, and these can be contentious for the reasons discussed. Unless there are clear and compelling reasons to initiate an IPO process, founders and principal stakeholders will rebuff the exercise of demand rights.

Clauses in Registration Rights

Registration rights typically contain clauses that establish the terms of registration. Among these details is the "lock-up" period during which investors are prohibited from selling their shares in a company after it has gone public. Typically, this is limited to 180 days.

Expiration of the lock-up period often results in the selloff of a company's stock and a fall in its price. For example, the shares of social media company Snap Inc., fell by as much as 5% after expiration of its lock-up period. Other clauses included are the termination of registration rights for investors and establishing responsibility for registration payment to the company's management.

Related terms:

Freed Up

Freed up is slang referring to when IPO underwriters are no longer obligated to sell at the agreed upon price, or money available after closing a position. read more

Initial Public Offering (IPO)

An initial public offering (IPO) refers to the process of offering shares of a private corporation to the public in a new stock issuance. read more

Liquidity Event

A liquidity event is an event that allows early investors in a company to cash out some or all of their equity. read more

What Is a Lock-Up Period?

A lock-up period is a window of time in which investors of a hedge fund or other closely-held investment vehicle are not allowed to redeem or sell shares.  read more

Minority Interest

A minority interest is ownership of less than 50% of a subsidiary's equity by an investor or a company other than the parent company. read more

Piggyback Registration Rights

Piggyback registration rights grant an investor the right to register an unregistered stock when another company or investor initiates a registration. read more

Restricted Stock

Restricted stock refers to insider holdings that are under some kind of sales restriction and must be traded in compliance with special regulations. read more

SEC Form S-1

SEC Form S-1 is the initial registration form the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires public companies to fill out if they want to list their shares on a national exchange. read more

Stock Market

The stock market consists of exchanges or OTC markets in which shares and other financial securities of publicly held companies are issued and traded. read more

Tag-Along Rights

Tag-along rights are contractual obligations used to protect a minority shareholder (usually in a venture capital deal). read more