Welcome to our dedicated page for Rocket Companies SEC filings (Ticker: RKT), 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.
Rocket Companies, Inc. filings document operating results, governance, funding arrangements and capital-structure matters for its homeownership platform. Its 8-K reports include earnings releases, Regulation FD supplemental financial information, preliminary operating updates, and material definitive agreements involving Rocket Mortgage warehouse and repurchase financing facilities.
Proxy filings cover board matters, stockholder proposals, executive compensation and voting procedures. Other disclosures address direct financial obligations, off-balance-sheet arrangements, funding capacity, risk factors and the financial performance of mortgage, real estate, title and personal finance businesses within Rocket Companies.
Rocket Companies, Inc. (RKT) filed a Form 4 showing director Matthew Rizik received 6,372,010 new Class L shares on 30 June 2025 as part of the company’s completed Up-C structure collapse.
The issuance consists of 3,186,005 Class L-1 and 3,186,005 Class L-2 shares, all acquired at $0 cost. Class L-1 shares are locked until 30 June 2026, while Class L-2 shares are locked until 30 June 2027. After the respective lock-ups, each share can convert 1-for-1 into Class A common stock, or will automatically convert immediately prior to most transfers. Additionally, all Class L shares will automatically convert to Class A when they hold less than 79 % of total voting power after 30 June 2027.
Following the transaction, Rizik beneficially owns 1,033,184 Class A shares (including 293,574 unvested RSUs) plus the newly issued Class L shares, all held directly.
Investor takeaways: The Up-C collapse simplifies Rocket’s capital structure and aligns insiders’ economic interests with public shareholders. However, the creation of 6.37 million convertible shares introduces a future supply overhang that could dilute Class A holders once lock-ups expire in 2026-2027.