(this site is best viewed at 800x600
VistaWEB® IPO has taken a cutting-edge approach to stock offerings - allowing emerging global technologies to reach a world of investors. And vice versa. All via the World Wide Web.
For proprietary technologies requiring equity capital funding, VistaWEB IPO offers various funding strategies including Initial Public Offerings and Secondary Offerings with Securities Exchange Commission Registration Statements for SB-2, unlimited $ amount, Regulation A to $5.0 million and SCOR to 1.0 million.
Vista Growth Capital Syndication investment, purchase warrants to $1.0 million.
Unlike traditional stock offerings, with VistaWEB IPO there are no brokers to go through, no commissions to pay, no underwriter or finders fees. All of which means, you receive 100% of the total proceeds.
Corporate candidates who qualify for our global stock offering program, benefit from exposure to global investors and strategic alliances, as well as receive valuable sponsorship from the Vista Growth Capital Syndication - a diverse and senior team of financial, technology, legal, and marketing experts.
VistaWEB's Beta Site offers the unique opportunity to showcase your proprietary technology in animated and multimedia form.
For global investors looking to get in on the ground floor of tomorrow's technologies, VistaWEB IPO delivers instant access to the portfolio of investment opportunities that qualify for this unique global stock offering program.

Self-underwritten public offerings are permissible under federal and state securities laws. A company need not employ the services of an underwriter to register shares of its capital stock with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission or the securities commission of any state or to distribute such shares to the public once registered.
A company can effect registration, sales, and distribution on VistaWEB IPO.
Considerable care, however, must be taken such that a company's officers and directors who attempt to sell securities are not deemed to be brokers under Sec.3(a)(3) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as well as state securities laws.
With certain exceptions, the decision to self-underwrite an offering has little impact on the registration process. The registration statement still must be filed, inclusive of the facing sheet, Part 1#- Information Required in Prospectus, Part II - Information Not Required in Prospectus, Signature, and Consents.
Comment letters will still be generated from the S.E.C. and amendments filed by a company responsively. The red herring pre-effective prospectus may still be utilized in conjunction with early marketing strategies. Blue Sky considerations are scaled back a bit insofar as Blue Sky comments usually concern underwriting terms.
A hybrid situation with VistaWEB IPO® may work best. A company can enter into an equity/investor Agreement with Vista Growth Capital Syndication, and could also compensate designated broker-dealers to assist in placing shares.
Should an issuer elect to raise money (maximum: $5,000,000) under Regulation A (technically an exemption from federal registration requirements), the rules change a bit.
Regulation A allows for general solicitation, imposes no sophistication or wealth criteria, is open to an unlimited number of investors, and imposes no resale restrictions.
Post-offering, the issuer need not file periodic reports pursuant to Section 13 of the '34 Act (unless required to do so because of the number of shareholders and asset values pursuant to Section 12(g) of the '34 Act).
Unfortunately some states, such as Florida for one example, do not exempt Registration A offerings from state registration requirements, subjecting Registration A issuers to merit review.
The Form U-7 Small Corporate Offering Registration (SCOR) to $1 million, adopted in 1989 by the North American Securities Administrators Association, with its simplified disclosure format, may be used. Limited pre-filing and pre-offering solicitations of interest - "testing the waters" - is allowed. Financial statements need not be audited.