Home/Ch. 1: Common Stock/Inspection of books and records

Inspection of books and records

1 min readLesson 4 of 17

Inspecting a company’s books and records can sound complicated, but the basic idea is simple: investors want reliable information about how a company is performing. Stockholders pay attention to a company’s success because performance can affect profits. Investors generally have the right to inspect the books and records of companies they’re invested in. For publicly traded companies, the Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) also enforces reporting requirements by requiring certain documents to be created and distributed on a regular schedule. 10-K annual report

Audited financial report

Example:Tesla 10K filing

10-Q quarterly report

Unaudited financial report

Example:Microsoft 10Q filing

Key points

Financial reporting

Publicly traded companies must file ongoing financial disclosures

10-K annual report

Audited financial report

10-Q quarterly report

Unaudited financial report

Key Takeaway

Inspecting a company’s books and records can sound complicated, but the basic idea is simple: investors want reliable information about how a company is performing. Stockholders pay attention to a company’s success because performance can affect profits.