SEC rule that helps determine when a company must register securities and enter the public reporting system based on shareholder and asset thresholds.
SEC Rule 12g-1 is part of the U.S. securities framework that helps determine when a company must register a class of securities and begin ongoing public reporting.
It matters because a company can move from a more private disclosure environment into a recurring SEC reporting regime once registration thresholds are met.
The rule connects:
shareholder thresholds
asset thresholds
registration triggers
the start of continuing reporting obligations
Once registration is triggered, the issuer may become subject to recurring disclosure through forms such as Form 10-K and Form 10-Q.
That makes Rule 12g-1 important not only as a legal threshold rule, but also as a gateway into the public-company reporting system.
Public Reporting: The disclosure regime companies may enter once registration obligations apply.
Registration Statement: A different but related path into regulated public disclosure.
Form 10-K: One of the core recurring filings associated with registered issuers.