On Wednesday 22 November 2006 09:41, Mike McMullin wrote:
> On Wed, 2006-11-22 at 00:19 -0900, John Andersen wrote:
> > On Tuesday 21 November 2006 22:53, TheOldWiseKing wrote:
> > > Another point I've just got from a friend, that in the USA Stock
> > > Market, It's not allowed to buy more that 10% of the stocks of a
> > > certain company. Because this may cause the buyer to bring the company
> > > down.
> > >
> > > Anyone is sure of this information?
> >
> > I suggest you get a more reliable friend.
>
>   There is a partial truth in the line above.  One is not allowed to own
> more than 10% of a companies outstanding stock, unless one files papers
> with the SEC, regarding the buying or selling of that stock.  Up to 10%
> is unfettered trading, over 10% is monitored trading.

There is no prohibition on owning any percentage of a company. 
One is not disallowed from doing so.

The reporting obligation (a task that any broker will take care of for
you) provides for a (fairly minor) civil monetary penalty for failure
to do the paperwork, not stock forfeiture. 

Long before that penalty would kick in, a 5% owner would usually
be demanding a seat on the board.  Last time I checked
Bill Gates only held around 3% of Microsoft stock.
-- 
_____________________________________
John Andersen

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