2 Quick Points to Simplify the SEC Form 13F

Gain insight into what top institutional investment managers are invested in

Tunji Onigbanjo
3 min readMar 24, 2021
Photo by lo lo on Unsplash

The United States Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) is an independent federal government regulatory agency responsible for protecting investing and maintaining fair and orderly functioning of the securities market. One of the items the SEC requires of institutional investment managers, organizations such as hedge funds, pension funds, and insurance companies, with at least $100 million in assets under management to file every calendar quarter the Form 13F.

A 13F discloses the equity holdings of investment managers and can help provide the general public, such as retail investors, with what institutional investors are holding. Even though 13F filings can help disclose what institutional money is doing, there are some major flaws. The following two quick points will help to simplify 13F filings further:

1. Why the 13F Was Created

2. Issues That Make the 13F Unreliable

1. Why the 13F Was Created

The United States Congress established the 13F in 1975, intending to provide the United States public a view of the holdings of the nation’s largest institutional investors. Essentially, it was created in hopes that it…

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Tunji Onigbanjo
Tunji Onigbanjo

Written by Tunji Onigbanjo

Financial literacy is important.

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