Tuesday, November 04, 2025 5:26:57 PM
🔹 1. Core Rule: SEC Rule 10b-18 (Safe Harbor for Buybacks)
The main regulation that governs company share repurchases is Rule 10b-18 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
It provides a “safe harbor” — meaning if a company follows these rules, the SEC presumes it’s not manipulating the stock price during buybacks.
🔹 2. Rule 10b-18 Conditions
To stay within the safe harbor, the company must meet four key conditions:
Condition Description
(1) Manner of Purchase Only one broker or dealer can be used per day to make repurchases.
(2) Timing The company cannot repurchase stock:
– At the opening of trading.
– Within the last 10–30 minutes of trading (depending on the market).
(For OTC, the “end of day” window is less defined, but same intent applies — no activity designed to affect closing prices.)
(3) Price The company cannot pay more than the highest independent bid or last independent transaction price, whichever is higher.
(4) Volume Daily buyback volume must not exceed 25% of the average daily trading volume (ADTV) of the security over the previous four weeks.
(OTC issuers often have low volume, so this can be restrictive.)
🔹 3. Disclosure Requirements
OTC companies are not required to file the same “daily repurchase disclosures” as exchange-listed companies.
But they must disclose share repurchases in their periodic reports:
Form 10-Q (quarterly)
Form 10-K (annually)
The company must report:
Total shares repurchased during the period
Average price paid
Whether shares were purchased under a publicly announced program
The maximum number/value remaining under the program
(See Item 703 of Regulation S-K)
🔹 4. OTC-Specific Considerations
OTC Markets does not directly regulate buybacks, but FINRA monitors trades for manipulation under Rule 2020 (prohibiting deceptive practices).
Because OTC stocks are less liquid, even small buybacks can influence the market price, so the SEC and FINRA may scrutinize them for potential market manipulation.
The company cannot repurchase shares if:
It has material nonpublic information (MNPI) that isn’t disclosed.
It’s under investigation or subject to trading suspension.
It’s not current in SEC filings or OTC disclosures.
🔹 5. Practical Notes
Many OTC companies use open-market repurchases or private negotiated deals.
The repurchases must be properly authorized by the company’s board of directors and documented.
If the issuer is Pink or non-reporting, it still must follow anti-manipulation and antifraud laws (Rule 10b-5).
✅ In summary:
An OTC company can buy back shares if it:
Follows Rule 10b-18 conditions (price, volume, timing, single broker).
Avoids trading on inside information.
Discloses the repurchases properly in filings or OTC reports.
Does not use the buyback to manipulate the stock price.
The main regulation that governs company share repurchases is Rule 10b-18 under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934.
It provides a “safe harbor” — meaning if a company follows these rules, the SEC presumes it’s not manipulating the stock price during buybacks.
🔹 2. Rule 10b-18 Conditions
To stay within the safe harbor, the company must meet four key conditions:
Condition Description
(1) Manner of Purchase Only one broker or dealer can be used per day to make repurchases.
(2) Timing The company cannot repurchase stock:
– At the opening of trading.
– Within the last 10–30 minutes of trading (depending on the market).
(For OTC, the “end of day” window is less defined, but same intent applies — no activity designed to affect closing prices.)
(3) Price The company cannot pay more than the highest independent bid or last independent transaction price, whichever is higher.
(4) Volume Daily buyback volume must not exceed 25% of the average daily trading volume (ADTV) of the security over the previous four weeks.
(OTC issuers often have low volume, so this can be restrictive.)
🔹 3. Disclosure Requirements
OTC companies are not required to file the same “daily repurchase disclosures” as exchange-listed companies.
But they must disclose share repurchases in their periodic reports:
Form 10-Q (quarterly)
Form 10-K (annually)
The company must report:
Total shares repurchased during the period
Average price paid
Whether shares were purchased under a publicly announced program
The maximum number/value remaining under the program
(See Item 703 of Regulation S-K)
🔹 4. OTC-Specific Considerations
OTC Markets does not directly regulate buybacks, but FINRA monitors trades for manipulation under Rule 2020 (prohibiting deceptive practices).
Because OTC stocks are less liquid, even small buybacks can influence the market price, so the SEC and FINRA may scrutinize them for potential market manipulation.
The company cannot repurchase shares if:
It has material nonpublic information (MNPI) that isn’t disclosed.
It’s under investigation or subject to trading suspension.
It’s not current in SEC filings or OTC disclosures.
🔹 5. Practical Notes
Many OTC companies use open-market repurchases or private negotiated deals.
The repurchases must be properly authorized by the company’s board of directors and documented.
If the issuer is Pink or non-reporting, it still must follow anti-manipulation and antifraud laws (Rule 10b-5).
✅ In summary:
An OTC company can buy back shares if it:
Follows Rule 10b-18 conditions (price, volume, timing, single broker).
Avoids trading on inside information.
Discloses the repurchases properly in filings or OTC reports.
Does not use the buyback to manipulate the stock price.
All posts are only my opinion and are not buy or sell recommendations.
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