If he's a 7.5% stake-holder, he has to file a 13-G with the SEC if he changes his position.Have they mostly been sold? Just a big ???
If he's a 7.5% stake-holder, he has to file a 13-G with the SEC if he changes his position.
But what is not in doubt is the trend ... down.Always hindsight in these situations. The trade was in the middle of the meltdown of a major crypto, with another major crypto taking a pass on buying them out!! With FTX (Fried) owning 7.5% of HOOD, it still is anyone's guess where this stock will land. What interest me are those young people with all those open accounts...
I hardly ever do high flyers...It's more IBM and ADM type of stock. Either other people see the value here (the last couple of days) or someone is getting squeezed...
We are talking about a $140. trade...Not earth shattering.
Yeah but you were referring to HOOD I thought. If he has a 7% stake in it, he has to file. If you meant his company, that entity would have to file also. You can have a corporation based out of the most secret country in the world, but if that corporation takes a 5% stake in a US publicly traded company, or alters that position, that company has to file a 13-D or 13-G with the SEC.Maybe not...
FTX is a Bahamian cryptocurrency exchange. FTX is incorporated in Antigua and Barbuda and headquartered in The Bahamas.
Yeah but you were referring to HOOD I thought. If he has a 7% stake in it, he has to file. If you meant his company, that entity would have to file also. You can have a corporation based out of the most secret country in the world, but if that corporation takes a 5% stake in a US publicly traded company, or alters that position, that company has to file a 13-D or 13-G with the SEC.
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Schedule 13D is a form that must be filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) when a person or group acquires more than 5% of a voting class of a company's equity shares. Schedule 13D must be filed within 10 days of the filer reaching a 5% stake. Schedule 13D is also known as a "beneficial ownership report."
When a person or group acquires 5% or more of a company's voting shares, they must report it to the Securities and Exchange Commission. Among the questions Schedule 13D asks is the purpose of the transaction, such as a takeover or merger.
If the beneficial owner's holdings change by 1% or more, they must amend their Schedule 13D.