Company Description
Equinor ASA (STOHF) stock represents an interest in Equinor ASA, a foreign private issuer that reports to the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission using Form 20-F and Form 6-K. According to its SEC filings, Equinor ASA is registered in Norway and maintains its principal executive office in Stavanger, Norway. The company’s shares are also referenced in filings under the symbols EQNR and EQNRO on other trading venues.
As a foreign issuer, Equinor ASA provides periodic updates to U.S. investors primarily through Form 6-K current reports. These reports often include press releases and other information that the company is required to disclose under Norwegian and European regulations, such as the EU Market Abuse Regulation and the Norwegian Securities Trading Act. Through these mechanisms, investors in STOHF and related instruments can access official company communications that are also made public in its home market.
Share buy-back activity is a recurring topic in recent Equinor ASA filings. Multiple Form 6-K reports describe a "share buy-back – fourth tranche for 2025" programme. The filings state that this tranche was announced on 29 October 2025 and is scheduled to run from 30 October 2025 to no later than 2 February 2026. Within this framework, Equinor ASA reports detailed information on the repurchase of its own shares, including daily trading volumes, average prices in Norwegian kroner (NOK), and total transaction values for specified periods.
The filings also show that Equinor ASA discloses the accumulated number of own shares it holds and the corresponding percentage of its share capital. For example, the company reports totals of own shares, both including and excluding shares held under Equinor’s share savings programme. These disclosures help investors understand how the buy-back programme affects the company’s share capital and the proportion of shares held in treasury.
Equinor ASA’s reports identify the trading venues used for the buy-backs, including OSE (Oslo Stock Exchange) and references to CEUX and TQEX. The filings also note that further information about the tranche can be found in stock market announcements published via a Norwegian news and disclosure service. This structure underscores that Equinor ASA’s securities are traded and regulated in multiple jurisdictions, with coordinated disclosure obligations.
In each of the recent Form 6-K filings, Equinor ASA states that the information is made public pursuant to the EU Market Abuse Regulation and is subject to disclosure requirements under Section 5-12 of the Norwegian Securities Trading Act. This highlights the regulatory environment in which the company operates and the standards that govern its public communications about share transactions and other material information.
For investors considering STOHF, these filings illustrate how Equinor ASA uses share buy-back programmes as part of its capital management. The detailed tables of transactions, volumes, and prices provide a granular view of how the programme is executed over time. The explicit reporting of the percentage of share capital held as own shares gives additional context on the scale of these activities relative to the company’s overall equity base.
Regulatory reporting and disclosure framework
Equinor ASA’s use of Form 6-K indicates that it furnishes to the SEC information that it has made public in its home market, filed with a stock exchange, or distributed to security holders. The repeated references to Form 20-F in the cover pages of these reports show that the company’s primary annual reporting format to the SEC is Form 20-F, which is standard for foreign private issuers.
The filings also demonstrate how Equinor ASA coordinates disclosures between U.S. and Norwegian markets. Each report on the share buy-back programme references a prior stock market announcement dated 29 October 2025, which is available through a Norwegian disclosure platform. By incorporating this information into Form 6-K, Equinor ASA makes equivalent information accessible to U.S. investors and other international stakeholders.
Capital management through own share purchases
Across the described periods, Equinor ASA reports the number of own shares purchased during specific date ranges, the average purchase price in NOK, and the total value of transactions. The company also tracks previously disclosed buy-backs under the same tranche and provides an accumulated total of shares repurchased and associated transaction values.
Each filing concludes with an updated figure for total own shares held and the percentage of the company’s share capital that these shares represent. The distinction between total own shares and those excluding the share savings programme clarifies how many shares are held for employee-related programmes versus other treasury purposes. This level of detail allows investors to follow how the buy-back tranche progresses over time.
Location and corporate status
In all recent filings, Equinor ASA lists its principal executive office in Stavanger, Norway. The filings consistently identify the company as Equinor ASA and do not indicate any change of name, merger, delisting, or bankruptcy. The presence of ongoing share buy-back activity and regular Form 6-K submissions suggests that Equinor ASA continues to operate and to meet its disclosure obligations as a foreign private issuer.
How STOHF relates to other Equinor listings
The share buy-back reports refer to Equinor ASA’s securities under the symbols EQNR on the Oslo Stock Exchange and the New York Stock Exchange, and EQNRO on other trading venues. While the filings do not describe the specific mechanics of STOHF, they show that Equinor ASA’s equity is accessible to investors through multiple markets and instruments. STOHF provides another way for investors to gain exposure to Equinor ASA, alongside these primary listings.
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