[25-NSE] SRIVARU Holding Limited Warrant SEC Filing
SRIVARU Holding Ltd (ticker: SVMHW) has been the subject of a Form 25 filing with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission dated 15 July 2025. The filing, submitted by Nasdaq Stock Market LLC, formally notifies the SEC of the removal of the company’s Ordinary Shares and Warrants from listing and registration under Section 12(b) of the Exchange Act.
The document confirms that:
- Nasdaq has followed the procedural requirements of 17 CFR 240.12d2-2(b) to strike the securities from its list.
- The issuer has satisfied the Exchange’s rules for voluntary withdrawal under 17 CFR 240.12d2-2(c).
- The certification is signed by Aravind Menon, Hearings Advisor, on behalf of Nasdaq.
No financial results, operational updates, or explanatory details regarding the decision are provided in the filing. Investors should note that once the Form 25 becomes effective, the securities will no longer be quoted on Nasdaq and their registration under Section 12(b) will terminate, which typically reduces trading liquidity and may shift trading to over-the-counter venues.
- None.
- Removal from Nasdaq listing reduces liquidity, visibility, and may force trading to less regulated OTC markets.
- Termination of Section 12(b) registration eliminates certain disclosure obligations, potentially limiting information available to investors.
Insights
TL;DR: Nasdaq filed Form 25 to delist SRIVARU’s shares and warrants—materially negative for liquidity and visibility.
Form 25 is the final regulatory step for removing a security from national-exchange trading and Section 12(b) registration. Because both the Ordinary Shares and Warrants are covered, all exchange-traded equity instruments will migrate off Nasdaq after the form becomes effective. The absence of explanatory notes means we cannot determine whether the action was involuntary (e.g., rule violation) or a voluntary withdrawal, but the end result is the same: investors lose exchange liquidity, real-time price discovery, and index eligibility. Historically, delisted equities experience wider spreads and depressed volumes, increasing cost of capital. Given the lack of offsetting positive news, the net investor impact is negative.