S-1645-119
Read twice and referred to the Committee on Finance.
Sponsored by Chris Van Hollen (D-MD)
What it does
This bill would require the Department of Commerce to establish an investment facility that licenses and provides financial leverage to "Ownership Investment Companies" (OICs). OICs would use that capital to finance the sale of private businesses to employee stock ownership plans (ESOPs) or worker-owned cooperatives, with the full faith and credit of the United States backing their obligations. The bill would also set private capital requirements, limits on third-party debt, enforcement provisions, and a mentorship program pairing new OICs with established ones.
Who benefits
Employees of private businesses who gain the opportunity to become partial or full owners through ESOPs or cooperatives. Business owners seeking an exit strategy who may find a new, federally supported buyer pool. ESOP trustees and independent financial advisors who would be required by the bill. Workers in businesses that convert, who may gain a share of company profits and greater job security. Rural and small-town communities where employee-owned businesses tend to remain locally rooted. OIC fund managers and financial intermediaries who would operate within the new licensing structure.
Who is hurt
Private equity firms and other traditional business acquirers who may face a federally subsidized competitor in the market for purchasing private businesses. Taxpayers who bear the risk of the federal guarantee backing OIC obligations if those investments fail. Employees of businesses that convert but underperform, who could lose retirement savings tied to company stock. Creditors and third-party lenders whose claims may be subordinated or limited by the bill's debt caps. Businesses that do not qualify or whose owners do not wish to sell to employees, who receive no comparable federal support for other exit strategies.
Supporters argue
Supporters argue that ESOPs have a demonstrated track record — research from the National Center for Employee Ownership shows employee-owned firms have higher productivity, greater worker wealth accumulation, and lower layoff rates than conventionally owned peers. They contend that the "silver tsunami" of retiring Baby Boomer business owners — estimated at 2.9 million businesses at risk of closure or distressed sale over the next decade — creates an urgent need for a structured federal mechanism to preserve jobs and local economic activity by facilitating employee buyouts that the private market currently underfinances.
Opponents argue
Opponents argue that placing the full faith and credit of the United States behind OIC obligations exposes taxpayers to open-ended losses if employee-owned businesses fail, effectively socializing investment risk while privatizing gains. They contend that existing federal tools — including SBA loans and the tax incentives already embedded in ESOP law under ERISA — already support employee ownership, and that creating a new federally guaranteed lending facility duplicates infrastructure, adds bureaucratic overhead, and distorts the market for business acquisitions by giving one ownership model a government-backed financing advantage over others.
Constitutional context
Congress has broad authority to establish lending facilities and regulate business transactions under the Commerce Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 3) and the Necessary and Proper Clause (Art. I, §8, cl. 18), as affirmed by Wickard v. Filburn's aggregation principle for economic activity. Post-Loper Bright (2024), any regulatory rules Commerce issues to implement the OIC licensing regime would face independent judicial scrutiny rather than deference, meaning the statutory authorization language would need to be precise to survive challenge.
Checks and balances
The Executive Branch (Department of Commerce) gains new licensing and regulatory authority over OICs; checks include statutory capital and debt requirements set by Congress, mandatory independent trustees and fairness opinions for ESOP transactions, and post-Loper Bright judicial review of any agency rules implementing the program.
Historical precedent
The Small Business Investment Company (SBIC) program, established in 1958, uses a structurally similar model — federally licensed private investment companies receive government-backed leverage to finance small business investments — and provides the closest direct analogue to the OIC facility proposed here.