...We Welcome You To The Resverlogix HUB withIn The AGORACOM COMMUNITY!

Free
Message: Re: Third Eye, AHA, US Listing
8
Sep 08, 2019 08:35AM
5
Sep 08, 2019 12:36PM
4
Sep 08, 2019 01:33PM

From Investopedia - I have also included an explanation for a Registration Statement.

Quiet Period

 
REVIEWED BY WILL KENTON
 
 Updated Jun 5, 2019

What is the 'Quiet Period'

Prior to a company’s Initial Public Offering (IPO), the quiet period is an SEC-mandated embargo on promotional publicity. This prohibits management teams or their marketing agents from making forecasts or expressing any opinions about the value of their company.

For publicly traded stocks, the four weeks before the close of a business quarter are also known as a quiet period. Here again, corporate insiders are forbidden to speak to the public about their business to avoid tipping certain analysts, journalists, investors and portfolio managers to an unfair advantage – often to avoid the appearance of insider information, whether real or perceived.

 

How the Quiet Period Works

After a company files registration for newly issued securities (stocks and bonds) with the SEC, their management team, investment bankers and lawyers go on a roadshow. During a series of presentations, potential institutional investors will ask questions about the company to gather investment research. Management teams must not offer any new information that is not already contained in the registration statement. But it still offers some level of informational gathering.

 

The quiet period begins when the registration statement is made effective and lasts for 40 days after the stock begins trading. Its purpose is to create a level playing field for all investors by ensuring everyone has access to the same information.

 

It’s not uncommon for the SEC to delay an IPO if a quiet period has been violated; interested parties take the process seriously as there’s a lot of money on the line.

 

 

Registration statements have the following two principal parts:

 

  1. Part I is the prospectus, the legal offering or "selling" document. The "issuer" of the securities must describe in the prospectus the important facts about its business operations, financial condition, and management. Everyone who buys the new issue, as well as anyone who is made an offer to purchase the securities, must have access to the prospectus.
  2. Part II contains additional information that the company does not have to deliver to investors. Anyone can see this information by browsing on the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) Web site.

 

 

3
Sep 08, 2019 07:58PM
4
Sep 11, 2019 03:03PM
1
Sep 11, 2019 03:08PM
2
Sep 11, 2019 03:11PM
3
Sep 11, 2019 03:22PM
2
Sep 11, 2019 03:32PM
1
Sep 11, 2019 03:47PM
1
Sep 11, 2019 04:13PM
5
bfw
Sep 11, 2019 04:18PM
2
Sep 11, 2019 04:25PM
8
Sep 11, 2019 05:16PM
6
Sep 11, 2019 06:04PM
6
Sep 11, 2019 06:52PM
1
Sep 11, 2019 07:42PM
4
Sep 11, 2019 08:00PM
1
Sep 11, 2019 08:39PM
2
Sep 11, 2019 09:05PM
4
Sep 11, 2019 10:09PM
2
Sep 11, 2019 10:54PM
9
Sep 11, 2019 11:19PM
4
Sep 12, 2019 03:57AM
3
Sep 12, 2019 05:53AM
7
Sep 12, 2019 09:44AM
3
Sep 19, 2019 08:07AM
1
Sep 19, 2019 08:48AM
1
Sep 19, 2019 10:47AM
Share
New Message
Please login to post a reply