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trader59

07/24/19 8:16 PM

#154880 RE: Sloan89RH #154879

They all start out "temporary," reinstatement is a long road back and will require all of the delinquent financials to be filed. This one would never make it back, and likely wouldn't want to.

Zues

07/24/19 9:13 PM

#154886 RE: Sloan89RH #154879

SEC suspensions are temporary. The suspended ticker has 10 days to become current. If they fail to do so the ticker is delisted.

https://otcmarketresearch.com/the-sec-just-suspended-my-stock-now-what

The SEC suspends trading in a stock for two basic reasons:
the company is a

1. delinquent filer;
2. fraud is suspected.

Delinquent Filers

Delinquent filers are SEC-registered companies that have failed to submit required annual and quarterly financial reports (also known as 10Ks and 10Qs).

An SEC-registered company is a company that registered its stock with the SEC typically through an S-1, SB-2 or Form 10 registration statement at some point in the past.

Once an Issuer is registered with the SEC the only way to stop being an SEC reporting company is if the SEC revokes the Issuers registration or if the Issuer voluntarily de-registers its stock by filing a Form 15.

As an SEC-registered company, the Issuer is required to filed periodic financial reports (10Qs and 10Ks). If they fail to file their periodic financial reports on time they become a delinquent filer.

Any Issuer that becomes more than one year late with their required filings begins to run the risk of an SEC suspension. The more delinquent they become the greater the risk of a suspension. That SEC suspension could come at any time without notice to public shareholders so be sure you know if the stock you are trading is a delinquent filer and that you understand the risk of owning that stock.

Usually the agency sends delinquency notices to the public Issuer before taking action; if the notices are ignored, trading in the company’s stock may be suspended without notice. At the same time, the SEC will initiate an administrative proceeding to revoke registration. The company will be served with a letter informing it that it has ten days in which to make some kind of case for its failure to file. If it does not do so, registration will be revoked by default and the ticker symbol will be deleted. The stock will no longer publicly trade resulting in a 100% loss for anybody that owns the stock.

The vast majority of suspended stocks are those of delinquent filers. Since 2010, 1,723 stocks have been suspended as delinquent filers. To date NOT ONE of the 1,723 suspended SEC Registered stocks has avoided revocation of their stock registration(s)….NOT ONE!!!!!!!!

whippinsaw

07/24/19 10:42 PM

#154902 RE: Sloan89RH #154879

Those suspensions were for 2017/18 delinquencies. Some also had no mailing address and never responded. Aryc has 2015,16,17,18,19 delinquencies. Surely if aryc was not responding to sec they would of been suspended years ago

janice shell

07/25/19 8:32 PM

#155095 RE: Sloan89RH #154879

All five suspensions were temporary in nature.

All SEC suspensions are temporary, by law. They expire after 10 trading days. Once the stock hasn't been quoted for four sessions, it loses compliance with Rule 15c2-11. That means it'll be bounced to the Grey Market.

And that means it'll have to find a sponsoring MM willing to file a Form 211 with FINRA. MMs are reluctant to do that for formerly suspended companies. And even if one eventually agrees, FINRA is often reluctant to approve.