Investors soon won't be able to follow Warren Buffett's every move in HP's stock if the billionaire's company keeps selling off shares of the printer and computer maker. Berkshire Hathaway’s ownership of HP Inc. is about to drop below 10% after it sold nearly 5 million shares, according to a regulatory filing by Buffett’s company late Monday. The Securities and Exchange Commission requires investors who own less than 10% of a company to report their company holdings only on a quarterly basis rather than big investors who must disclose their actions closer to the time of a so-called “triggering” event, which can mean buying or selling shares.
enough for what at the time was the second largest bank failure in history. we heard from the chair of the committee pressing the company and the management about why they got too big too fast, how they were fatally mismanaged and the stock trades the they made prior to the bank s failure. greg becker saying those are preplanned stock sales. also happening right now, artificial intelligence is front and center as open ai ceo sam altman testifies about his industry and what we know ai can do incredible things. everything from learning aides to driverless cars, facial recognition and virtual reality. industry leaders are also sounding the alarm about the dangers ai poses. here is altman, moments ago, talking about safety in ri. we believe the benefits of the tools we have deployed so