New Hope Bancorp (HOPE) director files initial ownership with SEC
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
3
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
HOPE BANCORP INC director Guido Francesco Sacchi has filed an initial insider ownership report indicating that no securities are currently beneficially owned. The filing shows total reported holdings of 0 shares after the reported date, so there are no insider equity positions disclosed at this time.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Insider Trade Summary
1 transaction reported
Mixed
1 txn
Insider
Sacchi Guido Francesco
Role
null
| Type | Security | Shares | Price | Value |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| holding | No securities are beneficially owned | -- | -- | -- |
Holdings After Transaction:
No securities are beneficially owned — 0 shares (Direct, null)
Footnotes (1)
Key Figures
Reported share ownership: 0 shares
1 metrics
Reported share ownership
0 shares
Total shares following reported date 2026-05-21
Key Terms
beneficially owned, reporting person, derivative securities
3 terms
beneficially owned financial
"No securities are beneficially owned"
Beneficially owned describes securities or assets where a person has the economic rights and control—such as the right to receive dividends and to direct voting—even if legal title is held in another name. Think of it like having the keys and using a car that’s registered to someone else: you get the benefits and make decisions. Investors care because beneficial ownership reveals who truly controls value and voting power, affecting corporate decisions and takeover dynamics.
reporting person financial
"The reporting person is Guido Francesco Sacchi"
derivative securities financial
"The derivative section shows no remaining derivative securities"
Financial contracts whose value is tied to the price or performance of another asset, such as a stock, bond, commodity, index, or currency; examples include options, futures and swaps. They matter to investors because they let you protect against price swings, bet on future moves or gain larger exposure with less upfront cash—like using a lever or insurance policy on an investment—so they can amplify gains and losses and help manage portfolio risk.