Giggles N’ Hugs, Inc. (GIGL) to Jumpstart Expans
Post# of 3935
Giggles N’ Hugs (OTCQB: GIGL) is going places with its fine-dining rooms, organic-food menus and adventure-filled play spaces for kids. The company is presently negotiating with the top four U.S. mall owners, who are ‘yearning’ to have Giggles N’ Hugs in their malls and are prepared to offer cash upfront to fund between 60 and 70 percent of opening costs. As consumers have increasingly been purchasing online, traffic by shoppers to malls has slowed. Mall owners want businesses that can generate excitement and foot traffic, and Giggles N’ Hugs fits that bill. Its three establishments, at Westfield Mall in Century City, Westfield Topanga Shopping Center, and the Glendale Galleria, have attracted the attention of People magazine, E! Online, Hollywood Life, Bloomberg Businessweek, the New York Post and many other print and online publications.
As CEO Joey Parsi explained recently, just as in other retail operations, location is, perhaps, the most important factor in the restaurant business. Giggles N’ Hugs is in the enviable position of having an extensive choice of locations, since it is such a magnet for mall foot traffic. Together, the major four mall owners present a wide-ranging, appetizing menu of over 550 domestic and international locations. The largest player, the Simon Property Group (NYSE: SPG), operates over 350 malls, including 17 overseas. The no. 2, General Growth Properties (NYSE: GGP), has over 120 properties. Westfield (OTC: WEFIF), the no. 3, has 32 shopping centers in the U.S., and Macerich (NYSE: MAC), the no. 4, has over 50 properties.
The company is beefing up its capital as it considers these invitations. It recently engaged investment bank Chardan Capital Markets, and it aims to raise $5 million through a 506(c) offering. Rule 506(c) under Regulation D is one of several ways an offering of securities may qualify for an exemption from the registration requirements of the Securities Act of 1933. It was created to implement Section 201(a) of the JOBS Act with the object of eliminating the prohibition on using general solicitation under, what is now, Rule 506(b). Rule 506(b) provides a “safe harbor” for a private offering under the Securities Act, i.e., it provides specific requirements that, if followed, establish that a transaction falls within the Section 4(a)(2) registration exemption.
However, under Rule 506(b), an issuer must not use general solicitation or advertising to market the securities nor sell securities to more than 35 non-accredited investors, among other stipulations. Rule 506(c) changes those two limbs of the rule by allowing general advertising but stipulates that only accredited investors must be contracted with. It also imposes a stricter standard to ensure that only accredited investors are contracted with. For a natural person to qualify as an accredited investor, he and his spouse must together have a net worth exceeding $1,000,000, excluding the value of the primary residence. Alternatively, he must have an annual income of over $200,000 in each of the two most recent years or joint income with his spouse in excess of $300,000 in each of those years and have a reasonable expectation of reaching the same income level in the current year.
With some cash to spend and so many invitations to dance, Joey Parsi’s biggest problem in the coming months may be deciding who is the most attractive partner.
Learn more by visiting www.gigglesnhugs.com
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