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James Hardie Industries plc SEC filings document its foreign-issuer reporting through Form 6-K submissions. The records include notices on substantial holdings, director interest changes, unquoted equity securities, applications for quotation of securities, and statements of CDIs on issue under the JHX identifier.
The filings also record corporate governance and reporting matters, including officer-transition disclosures and the company’s status as a limited liability company incorporated in Ireland that files annual reports on Form 20-F.
Wellington Management reports beneficial ownership of 58,388,593 shares of James Hardie Industries plc common stock, equal to 10.08% of the class. The filing shows no sole voting or dispositive power; voting and disposition are reported as shared with 47,670,210 shares shown for shared voting power and 58,388,593 for shared dispositive power.
The shares are held of record for clients of multiple Wellington investment advisers and are reported under the holdings of several Wellington entities (classified as HC and IA). The filing is made on Schedule 13G, indicating the position is reported as a passive investment and not held to influence control.
James Hardie Industries plc filed a Form 6-K that identifies its principal executive office in Dublin and confirms it files annual reports on Form 20-F. The filing includes an extended cautionary section listing examples of forward-looking statements, covering topics such as the acquisition of AZEK and its anticipated benefits, expectations about costs tied to plant suspensions or major capital projects, expectations about credit facilities and potential changes to terms or covenants, and statements about dividend payments and share buy-backs. The filing also highlights risks tied to corporate and tax domiciles, tax audits, legal proceedings and potential liabilities, and possible contributions to AICF for proven Australian asbestos-related personal injury and death claims. Economic and housing-market conditions and related factors (home construction, mortgage availability, exchange rates and consumer confidence) are explicitly identified as drivers of future performance. Readers are cautioned these are forward-looking examples and should not be relied on as guarantees.
James Hardie Industries plc provided administrative filing details and a detailed listing of forward-looking statements. The document shows the company uses Form 20-F for annual reporting and gives its principal executive office address in Dublin, Ireland. It enumerates common categories of forward-looking statements, including expectations about the acquisition of AZEK, future performance, projections of results of operations or financial condition, plans for capital expenditures, potential costs from plant suspensions or closures, credit facility renewals, dividend payments and share buy-backs, corporate and tax domicile changes, tax liabilities and audits, legal proceedings and related liabilities, timing and amounts of contributions to a special purpose fund for Australian asbestos claims (AICF), and macroeconomic or housing-market conditions affecting operations. The company warns readers not to place undue reliance on forward-looking language and identifies typical cue words used to signal such statements.
James Hardie Industries plc files this Form 6-K from its principal executive offices at 1st Floor, Block A One Park Place, Upper Hatch Street, Dublin 2, D02 FD79, Ireland. The registrant indicates it files annual reports on Form 20-F. The document provides a standard cautionary section listing categories of forward-looking statements, including statements about the acquisition of AZEK and its anticipated benefits, future performance and projections, strategic plans and acquisitions, costs and plans for plant suspensions or capital projects, credit facility renewals, dividends and share buy-backs, corporate and tax domicile changes, tax liabilities and proceedings, potential legal liabilities, contributions to a special asbestos-compensation fund (AICF), and macroeconomic and housing-market conditions in the company’s operating regions. The notice explains common forward-looking words investors should treat cautiously and advises not to place undue reliance on such statements.