[SCHEDULE 13G/A] Vita Coco Company, Inc. SEC Filing
Verlinvest Beverages SA reported beneficial ownership of 4,097,161 shares of The Vita Coco Company, Inc. (ticker COCO), representing 7.2% of the company's outstanding common stock based on 56,822,981 shares outstanding as of July 28, 2025. The filing is a Schedule 13G/A under the Securities Exchange Act and shows Verlinvest holds sole voting and dispositive power over all reported shares. The report lists Verlinvest's address in Ixelles, Belgium, and cites the issuer's principal executive office in New York. No shared ownership, group affiliations, or parties on whose behalf shares are held are disclosed.
- Material passive stake disclosed: Verlinvest beneficially owns 4,097,161 shares, representing 7.2% of COCO, a clearly reportable ownership level.
- Sole voting and dispositive power: The filer reports exclusive authority to vote and dispose of the reported shares.
- None.
Insights
TL;DR: Verlinvest holds a material passive stake of 7.2% in Vita Coco with sole voting and dispositive power, disclosed via Schedule 13G/A.
This Schedule 13G/A indicates a significant passive equity position: 4,097,161 shares equal to 7.2% of outstanding common stock using the issuer's reported share count. The filing specifies sole voting and dispositive authority, which means Verlinvest can vote and sell these shares independently. The form does not disclose any group relationships, derivative positions, or arrangements affecting control, and it references the issuer's reported outstanding share count from the Quarterly Report filed August 6, 2025. As a 13G filing, this reflects passive intent rather than an active 13D control position.
TL;DR: A 7.2% stake is material for governance but the filer reports no group or control relationships.
The disclosure shows Verlinvest as a single reporting person organized in Belgium with full sole voting and dispositive power over the reported shares. The statement explicitly marks Items 6–9 as not applicable, indicating no claims of holding on behalf of others, no parent/subsidiary acquisition structure, and no group affiliations. That limits immediate governance implications such as coordinated influence; however, a stake above 5% is sufficiently large to warrant monitoring for potential future engagement or filings if intentions change.