Patent Portfolios as Securities
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PATENT PORTFOLIOS AS SECURITIES
MICHAEL RISCH†
ABSTRACT
Companies of all types are buying, selling, and licensing patents—
not just individual patents, but many patents bundled into large
portfolios. A primary problem with these transactions is that the
market is illiquid: parties cannot identify holders of relevant
portfolios, they cannot agree on the value of portfolios, and the
specter of litigation taints every negotiation.
This Article presents a new way to improve market formation and
integrity by proposing that patent portfolios be treated as securities. If
patent-portfolio transactions are treated like stock transactions, sellers
steering clear of fraud laws may be forced to disclose information
about patent value. Furthermore, patent transactions previously
consummated in “dark markets” might now be traded in public
clearinghouses. Ultimately, parties that openly transact will develop
objective pricing methodologies that reduce the costs of negotiation
and decrease the leverage that portfolio holders exert on potential
licensees.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Introduction ............................................................................................... 90
I. Nonpracticing Entities, Product Companies, and Patent
Aggregation..................................................................................... 96
A. Nonpracticing Entities and Invention ................................... 97
B. Product-Company Patent Aggregation ................................ 99
II. Patents and Portfolios as Securities ................................................ 102
Copyright © 2013 Michael Risch.
† Professor of Law, Villanova University School of Law. The author thanks Amanda
Freechack, Greg Gorder, Azam Khan, Ian McClure, Jennifer O’Hare, Sean O’Connor, Poonam
Puri, Mark Schankerman, Urska Velikonja, Kish Vinayagamoorthy, and participants of the
OECD Expert Workshop on Patent Practice and Innovation, Law & Society Annual Meeting
Entrepreneurship Track, Villanova Law School Junior Faculty Workshop, Article One Partners
Napa Valley Summit, Intellectual Ventures University speaker series, Cleveland IP Law
Association, Cleveland-Marshall Law School, Gonzaga Law School and Idaho Law School
presentations for their helpful comments and feedback. Brett Hertel, Cailyn Reilly, Megan
Wood, and Denis Yanishevskiy provided valuable research assistance and RPX Corporation
provided data related to patent assertions.
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[Vol. 63:89
DUKE LAW JOURNAL
A. Patents vs. Portfolios............................................................. 102
B. A Need for Securities Regulation ....................................... 106
C. Securities and the Howey Test............................................. 107
1. Investment of Money with the Expectation of Profit ...... 109
2. Common Enterprise .......................................................... 113
3. From the Efforts of Others ............................................... 115
D. Licenses and Risk Capital .................................................... 119
III. Implications of Patent-Portfolio Securities................................... 121
A. Market Integrity .................................................................... 122
1. Public and Exempt Offerings ........................................... 122
2. Fraud................................................................................... 130
3. Insider Trading .................................................................. 131
B. Market Making ...................................................................... 132
1. Exchanges ........................................................................... 132
2. Dark Pools and Clearinghouses ....................................... 133
3. Security Pricing .................................................................. 137
4. Prospects ............................................................................. 152
Conclusion ................................................................................................ 153
INTRODUCTION
Patents are the new securities. They are bought and sold with
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frequency. Their resale value is often derived from an expected
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stream of revenue. In short, they are valuable assets that can
appreciate, depreciate, and result in gains and losses upon sale. As
such, they should be tradable on a market like securities. This Article
suggests one way to improve market formation for patents: by
treating patent portfolios like securities. Despite the recognition that
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patent markets are important and that portfolios are important, this
1. See Anne Kelley, Practicing in the Patent Marketplace, 78 U. CHI. L. REV. 115, 117
(2011); Nicholas Figueroa & Carlos J. Serrano, Patent Trading Flows of Small and Large Firms
25–27 (Apr. 15, 2013) (unpublished manuscript), available at http://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.
cfm?abstract_id=2251084.
2. 14 WILLIAM MEADE FLETCHER, FLETCHER CYCLOPEDIA OF THE LAW OF
CORPORATIONS § 6833 (rev. vol. 2012).
3. See Edmund W. Kitch, Elementary and Persistent Errors in the Economic Analysis of
Intellectual Property, 53 VAND. L. REV. 1727, 1740 (2000) (“It is clear that the ability of the
owners of intellectual property rights to transfer these rights in whole or in part to others is an
important feature of the systems. The rights can easily arise in the hands of persons or firms who
are not in the best position to exploit them. In order to involve others in the full exploitation of
the economic potential of the right, the owners must be able to enter into a wide range of
arrangements with other firms.”); Aleksandar Nikolic, Securitization of Patents and Its
Continued Viability in Light of the Current Economic Conditions, 19 ALB. L.J. SCI. & TECH. 393,
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Article is the first to study the implications of treating patent
portfolios as securities per se. Given the reality of patent aggregation,
we should consider securities laws as a way to make current markets
better.
This is not to say that patents have never been associated with
securities. Indeed, some speculators have packaged patents into
bundled portfolios that are then sold in pieces to investors, which is a
traditional way that patents, mortgages, or any other asset classes are
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“securitized.” Investors are then paid their portion of any licensing or
litigation profits associated with the bundle. But patent portfolios that
have not been packaged into a traditional security have escaped
regulatory scrutiny, despite having many similar features. Like
traditional securitization, portfolios are bought and sold, and the
owner of the portfolio obtains profits. This Article examines how
patent portfolios might be treated as securities even when ownership
of the (...truncated)