First Trust affiliates report 3.97M shares of Ingredion (NYSE: INGR)
Filing Impact
Filing Sentiment
Form Type
SCHEDULE 13G
Rhea-AI Filing Summary
Ingredion Incorporated reports that First Trust Portfolios L.P., First Trust Advisors L.P. and The Charger Corporation jointly reported beneficial ownership of 3,972,425 shares of Common stock, representing 6.31% of the class. The filing states shared voting power of 3,371,328 and shared dispositive power of 3,972,425. The filing is submitted under Rule 13d-1(k)(1) as a joint filing and is signed by James M. Dykas on 04/30/2026.
Positive
- None.
Negative
- None.
Key Figures
Beneficial ownership: 3,972,425 shares
Percent of class: 6.31%
Shared voting power: 3,371,328 shares
+3 more
6 metrics
Beneficial ownership
3,972,425 shares
Amount beneficially owned reported in Item 4(a)
Percent of class
6.31%
Percent of class reported in Item 4(b)
Shared voting power
3,371,328 shares
Shared power to vote reported in Item 4(c)(ii)
Shared dispositive power
3,972,425 shares
Shared power to dispose reported in Item 4(c)(iv)
CUSIP
457187102
CUSIP number listed on cover
Filing signature date
04/30/2026
Signed by James M. Dykas
Key Terms
beneficially owned, shared dispositive power, Rule 13d-1(k)(1), unit investment trusts
4 terms
beneficially owned regulatory
"Amount beneficially owned: 3,972,425"
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.
Rule 13d-1(k)(1) regulatory
"This filing is jointly filed ... pursuant to Rule 13d-1(k)(1)"
unit investment trusts financial
"unit investment trusts which hold shares of the issuer"
A unit investment trust (UIT) is a pooled investment that sells investors fixed “units” representing a pre-selected, unchanging bundle of stocks, bonds or other securities held for a set period. Think of it like buying a pre-packed grocery basket that won’t be rearranged — you know exactly what you own and roughly when it will end. UITs matter to investors because they offer predictable holdings and income patterns, lower active management, and clear tax and fee implications compared with regularly traded funds.