SEC Schedule 13G โ A Complete Guide
1. What Is SEC Schedule 13G?
SEC Schedule 13G is a disclosure report filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) when a person or group acquires beneficial ownership of more than 5% of a publicly traded companyโs voting equity securities without the intent to influence or control the issuer.
It is commonly referred to as a โpassive ownershipโ filing and serves as the lighter, streamlined alternative to Schedule 13D.
In practice, 13G = passive.
If the investor later develops control intent, they must switch to Schedule 13D.
2. When Is Schedule 13G Required?
A Schedule 13G must be filed when all of the following are true:
- The filer beneficially owns > 5%
- The security is a registered voting equity security
- The filer qualifies for 13G under SEC rules
- The filer does not seek to influence or change control
Key Filing Categories
Schedule 13G has three filer types, each with different deadlines:
- Rule 13d-1(b) โ Qualified Institutional Investors (QIIs)
- Rule 13d-1(c) โ Passive Investors
- Rule 13d-1(d) โ Exempt holders (e.g., pre-IPO owners)
3. Who Files Schedule 13G?
Typical 13G filers include:
- Mutual funds
- ETFs
- Pension funds
- Insurance companies
- Banks and trust companies
- Passive hedge funds
- Founders or early holders without control intent
Institutions vs Passive Investors
- Institutions file 13G because regulation assumes no control motive
- Individuals or funds can file 13G only if they certify passivity
4. Filing Deadlines (Critical Differences)
Qualified Institutional Investors (13d-1(b))
- 45 days after calendar year-end
- 10 days after month-end if ownership exceeds 10%
- 10 days after month-end for โฅ5% changes thereafter
Passive Investors (13d-1(c))
- Within 10 calendar days after crossing 5%
- Promptly upon exceeding 10% or changing by โฅ5%
Exempt Holders (13d-1(d))
- 45 days after calendar year-end
- Based on historical exemption (e.g., pre-1934 Act holdings)
5. High-Level Structure of Schedule 13G
Compared to 13D, Schedule 13G is much shorter and more mechanical.
Schedule 13G
โโโ Item 1: Security and Issuer
โโโ Item 2: Identity and Filing Status
โโโ Item 3: Filer Classification
โโโ Item 4: Ownership
โโโ Item 5: Ownership Changes (โค5%)
โโโ Item 6: Ownership >5% on Behalf of Another
โโโ Item 7: Group Information
6. Item-by-Item Deep Dive
Item 1 โ Security and Issuer
What it includes
- Issuer name
- Address of principal executive offices
- Title of security
- CUSIP number
Why it matters
- Enables precise security identification
- Allows cross-referencing with 13F, N-PORT, and other filings
Item 2 โ Identity and Filing Status
Key disclosures
- Name and address of reporting person
- Citizenship or jurisdiction
- Type of filer (individual vs institution)
Why it matters
- Establishes who owns the shares
- Clarifies regulatory treatment under 13G rules
Item 3 โ Filer Classification (Very Important)
The filer must check one or more boxes, such as:
- Bank
- Insurance company
- Investment company
- Investment adviser
- Broker-dealer
- Employee benefit plan
- Individual
- Other
Why it matters
- Determines eligibility for 13G
- Impacts filing deadlines and amendment rules
Item 4 โ Ownership
Core quantitative disclosure
- Number of shares beneficially owned
- Percentage of class outstanding
- Sole voting power
- Shared voting power
- Sole dispositive power
- Shared dispositive power
Why it matters
- Shows economic exposure
- Reveals potential latent influence, even without intent
Item 5 โ Ownership Changes โค 5%
This item is checked only if ownership has fallen below 5%.
Why it matters
- Signals position exits
- Often overlooked but useful for tracking capital rotation
Item 6 โ Ownership on Behalf of Another
Indicates whether the shares are held:
- For the benefit of clients
- In a fiduciary capacity
- Without economic interest to the filer
Why it matters
- Separates beneficial ownership from economic benefit
- Critical for custodians and asset managers
Item 7 โ Group Information
Discloses whether:
- The filer is part of a group
- Multiple parties share ownership under an agreement
Why it matters
- Prevents circumvention of disclosure via coordination
- Group status can invalidate 13G eligibility
7. Amendments โ Schedule 13G/A
A Schedule 13G/A must be filed when:
- Ownership exceeds 10%
- Ownership changes by โฅ5%
- Information becomes materially inaccurate
Timing Rules
- QIIs: Monthly or annual, depending on threshold
- Passive investors: Promptly (often within days)
8. 13G vs 13D (Side-by-Side Summary)
13G vs 13D
โโโ Intent
โ โโโ 13G: Passive ownership
โ โโโ 13D: Active / control-oriented
โโโ Disclosure depth
โ โโโ 13G: Minimal
โ โโโ 13D: Extensive (Item 4 focus)
โโโ Filing burden
โ โโโ 13G: Low
โ โโโ 13D: High
โโโ Typical filers
โ โโโ 13G: Funds, ETFs, institutions
โ โโโ 13D: Activists, acquirers
โโโ Market impact
โโโ 13G: Usually muted
โโโ 13D: Often price-moving
9. Why Investors Still Care About Schedule 13G
Even though it is โpassive,โ Schedule 13G can signal:
- Large institutional conviction
- Index or ETF rebalancing
- Early stake-building before activism
- Future 13D โupgradesโ
Many activist campaigns begin as 13G filings โ until intent changes.
10. Practical Takeaways
- 13G โ irrelevant โ size and filer identity matter
- Watch for 13G โ 13D switches
- Repeated 13G/A amendments can reveal accumulation patterns
- Combine 13G data with 13F, N-PORT, and trading volume for context