Welcome to our dedicated page for JH Diversified Income Fund SEC filings (Ticker: HEQ), 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.
The John Hancock Diversified Income Fund (NYSE: HEQ) SEC filings page on Stock Titan provides access to the fund’s official regulatory documents as filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission. As a closed-end management investment company in the finance and insurance sector, HEQ reports key information about its governance, operations, and shareholder matters through these filings.
Among the important documents available is the definitive proxy statement (DEF 14A) for John Hancock Diversified Income Fund and related John Hancock closed-end funds. This proxy statement describes the annual meeting of shareholders, the proposal to elect Trustees, and the structure of the Board, including its staggered terms. It also identifies John Hancock Investment Management LLC as the advisor and administrator and Wellington Management Company LLP as the subadvisor to Diversified Income Fund, and outlines how shareholders of record can vote by mail, phone, or online.
On Stock Titan, HEQ filings are updated in line with the SEC’s EDGAR system, and AI-powered summaries help explain the content and purpose of each document in accessible language. Users can review proxy statements to understand Board oversight, advisory relationships, and record ownership details, and can use the platform’s tools to quickly identify sections on voting procedures, committee charters, and other governance topics.
In addition to proxy materials, investors may consult other HEQ filings to complement the fund’s distribution notices and shareholder communications. The combination of real-time filing access and AI-generated explanations is intended to make it easier to interpret lengthy documents and to locate information relevant to income-focused, sector-diversified closed-end funds like John Hancock Diversified Income Fund.