Subject: Re: brk, spcx, on a 4 day week,
Ron Baron just did this on cnbc. Ron got 1 billion of the spcx IPO and has over 25 billion invested with Musk. I'm not a lawyer but I spent many hours reading the regs to protect myself. Both my SEC lawyers eventually got 48 months, and my corporate genius lawyer served even more than 48 months. If, IF, I was friends with Ron I would love to chat with him about the, quite period, which I always respected.

https://www.cnbc.com/video/202...



"" SEC Quiet Period — Definition, Rules, and Compliance
The quiet period is a federally mandated timeframe under U.S. securities law that restricts certain communications by companies, underwriters, and insiders during a securities offering — especially an initial public offering (IPO) or before earnings announcements — to prevent selective disclosure and maintain market fairness Investor.gov+1.

Legal Basis
The quiet period is rooted in the Securities Act of 1933, particularly Section 5(c), which prohibits offering to sell securities unless a registration statement has been filed with the SEC marc.deschenaux.com. The SEC interprets “offer” broadly to include any communication that could generate public interest in the securities, even if not explicitly promotional Investor.gov.

Key Stages and Duration
Pre-filing quiet period: Begins when a company decides to go public and ends when it files its registration statement (Form S‑1). No “gun‑jumping” (conditioning the market) is allowed marc.deschenaux.com.

Post-filing quiet period: Runs from filing to the SEC declaring the registration statement “effective” (often 10–40 days, depending on the offering) Investor.gov+1.

Earnings quiet period: For public companies, the four weeks before a quarter ends is also a quiet period to prevent selective disclosure Investopedia.

What’s Prohibited
During the quiet period, companies must avoid:

Public statements, forecasts, or opinions about the company’s value or prospects

Promotional activities or roadshows that could condition the market

Any communication that could be construed as soliciting or offering to sell the securities Aaron Hall, Attorney for Business Owners+1
Exceptions
The SEC allows limited disclosures to avoid unduly restricting information flow:

Rule 135: Permits general factual announcements about an upcoming offering, without promoting the securities marc.deschenaux.com.

Ordinary business communications (e.g., press releases, product updates) that do not reference the offering marc.deschenaux.com.

Emerging Growth Companies (EGCs) under the JOBS Act have some reduced restrictions Investopedia.

Consequences of Violation
Violations can result in:

Regulatory enforcement actions (fines, injunctions)

Delays or denials of the registration statement

Reputational damage and increased scrutiny Aaron Hall, Attorney for Business Owners+1
Purpose
The quiet period ensures:

All investors receive the same, vetted information at the same time

No unfair advantage from selective disclosure

Market integrity and fair access to information Aaron Hall, Attorney for Business Owners+1

In short: The SEC quiet period is a “cone of silence” before and after major offerings, designed to prevent market manipulation and protect investors. Companies must carefully control communications to avoid “gun‑jumping” and comply with both the pre-filing and post-filing restrictions.""