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Monday, March 17, 2025 11:24:57 PM
Senor c had a very nice post on Stocktwits. Always enjoy his analysis and his insight on how this will play out. Let's see if this will play out like indicated by him
"An LLC (Limited Liability Company) cannot be a publicly traded company in the traditional sense. Publicly traded companies are typically structured as corporations (C-Corporations or S-Corporations), not LLCs. This is because the stock market and the regulations governing publicly traded companies are designed to work with corporate structures, which can issue shares of stock to the public.
LLCs, on the other hand, are private entities with a more flexible ownership structure, often having members instead of shareholders. They are generally not allowed to issue stock or be traded on public exchanges. However, an LLC can convert into a corporation if it wants to go public, and once it does, it can offer shares and be listed on a stock exchange.
In some cases, an LLC may become publicly traded through a process called a "reverse merger" or by forming a publicly traded partnership, but these structures are more complex and less common.
So, while an LLC can't directly be publicly traded, it can undergo a transformation to take the form of a corporation to become publicly traded."
"An LLC (Limited Liability Company) cannot be a publicly traded company in the traditional sense. Publicly traded companies are typically structured as corporations (C-Corporations or S-Corporations), not LLCs. This is because the stock market and the regulations governing publicly traded companies are designed to work with corporate structures, which can issue shares of stock to the public.
LLCs, on the other hand, are private entities with a more flexible ownership structure, often having members instead of shareholders. They are generally not allowed to issue stock or be traded on public exchanges. However, an LLC can convert into a corporation if it wants to go public, and once it does, it can offer shares and be listed on a stock exchange.
In some cases, an LLC may become publicly traded through a process called a "reverse merger" or by forming a publicly traded partnership, but these structures are more complex and less common.
So, while an LLC can't directly be publicly traded, it can undergo a transformation to take the form of a corporation to become publicly traded."
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