Welcome to our dedicated page for Brokfld Prpty Pf SEC filings (Ticker: BPYPN), a comprehensive resource for investors and traders seeking official regulatory documents including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly earnings, 8-K material events, and insider trading forms.
Our SEC filing database is enhanced with expert analysis from Rhea-AI, providing insights into the potential impact of each filing on Brokfld Prpty Pf's stock performance. Each filing includes a concise AI-generated summary, sentiment and impact scores, and end-of-day stock performance data showing the actual market reaction. Navigate easily through different filing types including 10-K annual reports, 10-Q quarterly reports, 8-K current reports, proxy statements (DEF 14A), and Form 4 insider trading disclosures.
Designed for fundamental investors and regulatory compliance professionals, our page simplifies access to critical SEC filings. By combining real-time EDGAR feed updates, Rhea-AI's analytical insights, and historical stock performance data, we provide comprehensive visibility into Brokfld Prpty Pf's regulatory disclosures and financial reporting.
Brookfield Property Partners L.P. filed a Form 6-K furnishing an indenture framework under which its indirect subsidiary, Brookfield Office Properties Inc., may issue unsecured debentures, notes or other indebtedness in multiple series. Computershare Trust Company of Canada acts as trustee under the March 18, 2026 indenture.
The notes can be structured with various maturities, interest terms, currencies, redemption features and potential conversion or exchange into securities of Brookfield Office Properties Inc. or other issuers, as set in supplemental indentures. A separate subordinated guarantee agreement involves Brookfield Property Partners L.P., Brookfield Property L.P. and related holding entities as guarantors for certain series. The indenture is governed by the laws of Ontario and Canada.
Brookfield Property Partners L.P. director Rodert Lars filed an initial statement of beneficial ownership of securities. This Form 3 filing establishes his reporting status as a director of the partnership and does not report any share purchases, sales, or other transactions.
Brookfield Property Partners L.P. director Stephen DeNardo filed an initial ownership report showing indirect holdings of Class A Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Units, Series 1. The filing lists 10,000 such units held indirectly through retirement and trust accounts, without reporting any new purchases or sales.
Brookfield Property Partners L.P. director Jeffrey M. Blidner filed an initial ownership report for preferred equity. He reports 653 Class A Cumulative Redeemable Preferred Units, Series 1 held directly, plus 191 such units held through the Blindner Family Foundation and 308 units held through Jeffrey Blidner Ltd., all in a subsidiary, Brookfield Property Preferred L.P.
Brookfield Property Partners L.P. Chief Financial Officer Bryan K. Davis filed an initial ownership report listing preferred unit holdings. He reports 31,627 Class A Cumulative Redeemable Units, Series 1, 78,488 6.50% Class A Preferred Units, Series 1, 72,240 6.375% Class A Preferred Units, Series 2, and 121,541 5.750% Class A Preferred Units, Series 3, all held directly.
Brookfield Property Partners L.P. files its annual Form 20‑F for the year ended December 31, 2025, outlining its global real estate business focused on office, retail, multifamily, logistics, hospitality and other commercial properties, reported under IFRS Accounting Standards.
The partnership lists several series of Class A cumulative redeemable preferred units on Nasdaq and the Toronto Stock Exchange and discloses 410,493,281 limited partnership units outstanding as of December 31, 2025. Financial performance is evaluated using non‑IFRS measures such as NOI, funds from operations and equity attributable to unitholders, with reconciliations provided in the operating and financial review.
The filing emphasizes extensive risk disclosures, including leverage and refinancing risk, interest rate and liquidity exposure, tenant defaults, structural shifts in office and retail demand, cybersecurity and AI‑related risks, climate‑change impacts, and complex relationships with Brookfield, which wholly owns all LP units and controls governance, management services and key capital allocation decisions.