Remove 2008 Remove Companies Remove Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC)
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Why XRP Is Skyrocketing Today

The Motley Fool

XRP is surging today due to the arrival of a key deadline in a legal case brought by the Securities and Exchange Commission ( SEC ) against Ripple Labs -- the company that created the cryptocurrency. Apple: if you invested $1,000 when we doubled down in 2008, youd have $44,179 !

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Billionaires Are Piling Into This Nasdaq Stock-Split Company Down 52% and Yielding a Healthy 4% Dividend

The Motley Fool

In case you missed it, institutional funds recently disclosed their latest equity holdings for the third quarter of the year in their 13F forms filed with the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Warren Buffett's company Berkshire Hathaway has been buying shares all year. Could they be onto something?

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Why Super Micro Computer Stock Sank This Week

The Motley Fool

The server company's share price ended the period down 17% from last week's market close, according to data from S&P Global Market Intelligence. Despite assurances that the stock is on track to avoid being delisted, investors also continued to weigh the risk that the company's shares could be removed from the Nasdaq exchange.

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Warren Buffett Dumps Nearly $10 Billion of 1 Key Stock and Buys $345 Million of His Favorite Stock. Here's What You Need to Know.

The Motley Fool

So when the billionaire investor makes substantive changes in his company's key holdings, people pay attention. The latest sale is particularly interesting The Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) requires large shareholders -- investors owning more than 10% of a company's stock -- to report any trade within two business days.

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Should You Buy XRP (Ripple) Right Now With $100 and Hold Through 2024 and Beyond?

The Motley Fool

This doesn't include the money that bigger institutions -- like companies, banks, or governments -- move from country to country. XRP has been under scrutiny as the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) argued that its initial token sales violated securities laws. Regulatory issues remain a top concern.

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Wells Fargo Pays $40 Million to Customers for Excessive Fees

The Motley Fool

In addition, Wells Fargo paid a $35 million civil penalty to the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). Excessive fees According to the SEC, each of the affected accounts was opened prior to 2014, and account holders continued to pay excessive fees through December 2022. In total, investors paid more than $26.8

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Surprise: You're Probably Paying a Lot More in Investing Fees Than You Think

The Motley Fool

Meanwhile, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) itself has pointed out that if you start with a portfolio valued at $100,000 and it grows by an annual average of 4% over 20 years while you pay 0.50% per year, you'll end up with $10,000 less than someone in the same situation who only pays 0.25%.