Richard Thomas
10 horas hace
Putz,
5620. Meetings of Shareholders
(a) Each Company listing common stock or voting preferred stock, and their equivalents, shall hold an annual meeting of Shareholders no later than one year after the end of the Company's fiscal year-end, unless such Company is a limited partnership that meets the requirements of Rule 5615(a)(4)(D).
The fiscal year end is June 30.
Hope that helps, happy weekend all.
The_Gman
11 horas hace
Nasdaq 5600. Corporate Governance Requirements
(this should help confuse you...)
https://listingcenter.nasdaq.com/rulebook/nasdaq/rules/Nasdaq%205600%20Series
5601. Preamble to the Corporate Governance Requirements
In addition to meeting the quantitative requirements in the Rule 5200, 5300, 5400 and 5500 Series, Companies applying to list and listed on Nasdaq must meet the qualitative requirements outlined in this Rule 5600 Series. These requirements include rules relating to a Company's board of directors, including audit committees and Independent Director oversight of executive compensation and the director nomination process; recovery of erroneously awarded compensation; code of conduct; shareholder meetings, including proxy solicitation and quorum; review of related party transactions; and shareholder approval, including voting rights. Exemptions to these rules, including phase-in schedules, are set forth in Rule 5615.
5620. Meetings of Shareholders
(a) Each Company listing common stock or voting preferred stock, and their equivalents, shall hold an annual meeting of Shareholders no later than one year after the end of the Company's fiscal year-end, unless such Company is a limited partnership that meets the requirements of Rule 5615(a)(4)(D).
IM-5620. Meetings of Shareholders or Partners
Rule 5620(a) requires that each Company listing common stock or voting preferred stock, and their equivalents, hold an annual meeting of Shareholders within one year of the end of each fiscal year. At each such meeting, Shareholders must be afforded the opportunity to discuss Company affairs with management and, if required by the Company's governing documents, to elect directors. A new listing that was not previously subject to a requirement to hold an annual meeting is required to hold its first meeting within one-year after its first fiscal year-end following listing. Of course, Nasdaq's meeting requirement does not supplant any applicable state or federal securities laws concerning annual meetings.
This requirement is not applicable to issuers whose only securities listed on Nasdaq are non-voting preferred securities, debt securities, Derivative Securities as defined in Rule 5615(a)(6)(B) or securities listed pursuant to Rule 5730(a) (such as Trust Preferred Securities and Contingent Value Rights), unless the listed security is a common stock or voting preferred stock equivalent (e.g., a callable common stock). Notwithstanding, if the Company also lists common stock or voting preferred stock, or their equivalent, the Company must still hold an annual meeting for the holders of that common stock or voting preferred stock, or their equivalent.
Adopted Mar. 12, 2009 (SR-NASDAQ-2009-018); amended May 28, 2019 (SR-NASDAQ-2019-039), operative June 28, 2019.
ColdDarkHole
12 horas hace
When you have no money, no news, and debt to pay off somehow, you might as well delay the pain as long as you can. Maybe by delaying to the last possible time, something might actually happen that will give them something to discuss other than the weather. If I were in the dumpster fire they are in right now, I would not have a meeting until I absolutely had to. There is no positive light to shine until some undetermined entity shits out XX million dollars into the NB bank. Until that single event occurs, this is a catastrophe. Bullshit PowerPoint story time with coffee and donuts is over.
That being said, if we get to the meeting with no tangible news, it will still be tapdancing and bullshit like before, and before, and before. Rinse repeat. I just hope the company keeps existing if nothing occurs soon.
PutzMueler
2 días hace
ge11, Sometimes I wonder if we will ever see a mine in Nebraska, until the rest of the world is depleted. lol
If USA can get Niobium from Brazil
Scandium from Australia
Titanium from , https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Titanium_production_by_country
Rare Earth Elements, from Anywhere, (If the Light bulb is turned on) 💡, pfffft
***********
12 years ago I was betting on Niobium only, because we were coming out of a recession, and infrastructure would need Niobium in steel.
Boy was I wrong! 🙃
I swear if I ever make any money here I will hire myself, to find out the truth about the REE's 💡
Watch out Mark, lol
SagittariusA
2 días hace
NioCorp to Speak at the 2025 Mining Conference
on Jan. 16, 2025
CENTENNIAL, Colo. (January 9, 2025) – NioCorp Developments Ltd. CEO Mark A. Smith (“NioCorp” or the “Company”) (NASDAQ:NB) will speak at the “2025 Mining Conference: Mining & Supplying Critical Minerals & Precious Metals,” presented by Maxim Group LLC on Thursday, January 16, 2025.
Mr. Smith will engage in a virtual conversation with Tate Sullivan, Senior Research Analyst at Maxim Group, about NioCorp’s Elk Creek Critical Minerals Project and larger trends related to minerals development and global supply chains.
The NioCorp portion of the 2025 Mining Conference will begin at 12 Noon Eastern and is available via this link (https://maximgrp.zoom.us/j/85166396925). Those wishing to view the conversation must first pre-register with Maxim here: https://m-vest.com/events/mining-01162025
The Maxim Group initiated equity research coverage on January 8, 2025 of NioCorp with a buy rating. Maxim’s coverage report on NioCorp is available to Maxim clients.