Manage 25s or less Application Forms easily online

Document management can stress you when you can’t find all the documents you need. Fortunately, with DocHub's substantial form library, you can discover all you need and easily take care of it without the need of changing among applications. Get our 25s or less Application Forms and start working with them.

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Commonly Asked Questions about 25s or less Application Forms

Going dark refers to when a public company becomes a private company. It is also referred to as deregistration. The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) regulates how companies can go dark in Rule 12d2-2, requiring them to file a Form 25.
Though delisting does not affect your ownership, shares may not hold any value post-delisting. Thus, if any of the stocks that you own get delisted, it is better to sell your shares. You can either exit the market or sell it to the company when it announces buyback.
A companys stock may be delisted as the result of failing to meet the exchanges laundry list of requirements. The listing criteria include maintaining trading price thresholds for certain time frames, minimum revenue standards, market capitalization thresholds, and shareholder percentage requirements.
The delisting of a security can be voluntary or involuntary and usually results when a company ceases operations, declares bankruptcy, merges, does not meet listing requirements, or seeks to become private.
Typically, mandatory delisting occurs because a listed company fails to meet the minimum share price requirement. Often, this can occur if a companys financial results have been disappointing for some time, and investors think a company may be headed toward bankruptcy.
SEC Form 25 is a document that a public corporation must submit under Rule 12d2-2 of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) to delist its securities.
This form shall be used by registered national securities exchanges and issuers for notification of removal of a class of securities from listing on a national securities exchange and/or withdrawal of registration under section 12(b) of the Act (15 U.S.C. 78l(b)).
A public company files SEC Form 15-12B with the Securities and Exchange Commission when it has decided to delist and deregister, a process known as going dark. SEC Form 15 is a filing with the regulatory agency by a company that revokes its registration as a publicly-traded corporation.