If You Invested in Mills Music Trus (MMTRS)
Looking for the current price? See the MMTRS quote & overviewWhat $1,000 or $10,000 in MMTRS Would Be Worth Today
Real historical value by amount invested and how long ago| If you invested | 1 year ago | 5 years ago | 10 years ago | Since Jan 4, 2022 |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| $1,000 | $931 -7% | — | — | $515 -48% |
| $10,000 | $9,311 -7% | — | — | $5,153 -48% |
Based on real historical closing prices through the latest market close. Past performance does not guarantee future results.
Custom Calculation
Choose your own date and amount for MMTRS$1,000 Investment Over Time
MMTRS vs S&P 500Year-by-Year Returns
MMTRS annual performance| Year | Start Price | End Price | Annual Return | Cumulative |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2022 | $48.52 | $39.04 | -19.5% | -19.5% |
| 2023 | $45.00 | $36.25 | -19.4% | -25.3% |
| 2024 | $37.25 | $36.00 | -3.4% | -25.8% |
| 2025 | $36.00 | $22.55 | -37.4% | -53.5% |
| 2026 | $23.50 | $25.00 | +6.4% | -48.5% |
About Mills Music Trus
Industrials · OTC Link
Mills Music Trust CBI (MMTRS) is associated with Mills Music Trust, a trust that files reports with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC). According to its SEC filings, the trust is organized in New York and is identified by Commission File Number 000-02123 and I.R.S. Employer Identification Number 13-6183792. The trust structure and the presence of unit holders indicate that interests in the trust are held in the form of units.
The SEC filings show that Mills Music Trust operates through a corporate trustee, identified in the filings as HSBC Bank U.S.A., N.A., Corporate Trust Issuer Services. The trust issues reports to its unit holders that include computation details regarding payments received over specific quarterly periods. These reports are filed as exhibits to current reports on Form 8-K.
Business activities and payment structure
Based on the available SEC filings, Mills Music Trust receives payments under an Asset Purchase Agreement dated December 5, 1964. The filings describe a deferred contingent purchase price obligation referred to as a Contingent Portion Payment. EMI Mills Music Inc. and EMI Consortium Music Publishing Inc. (together referred to as EMI in the filings) have obligations to make these Contingent Portion Payments to the trust.
The trust’s filings explain that the Contingent Portion Payments are calculated under the terms of the Asset Purchase Agreement, and that the interpretation and application of certain provisions of that agreement have been the subject of discussions and a tolling agreement between EMI and the trust. The trust’s income to be distributed to unit holders is influenced by how these contractual provisions are applied.
Key contractual developments
In a Form 8-K describing events on October 30, 2025, Mills Music Trust reported that it, together with EMI Mills Music Inc. and EMI Consortium Music Publishing Inc., agreed to settle all claims of the trust or its trustees for periods prior to December 31, 2024 relating to EMI’s obligation to make ongoing Contingent Portion Payments and to the interpretation of certain provisions of the Asset Purchase Agreement. The settlement included a payment to the trust and amendments to specific sections of the Asset Purchase Agreement.
According to that filing, one amendment provides that, beginning with the quarterly period starting July 1, 2025, in calculating any Contingent Portion Payment due and payable by EMI to the trust, EMI will cap the foreign sub-publishing fee between EMI and any foreign affiliate at twenty-five percent. The filing explains that this cap functions as a limitation on certain deductions that EMI can make to payments due to the trust.
The same filing also describes an amendment to another section of the Asset Purchase Agreement. Under this amendment, beginning with the quarterly period starting July 1, 2025, EMI is only entitled to offset the costs associated with obtaining U.S. copyright renewals for a song against royalty income collected by EMI in the United States for that song, and not against foreign royalty income collected outside the United States for that song. The filing states that this modification narrows the permissible offsets to payments due from EMI to the trust.
Reporting to unit holders
Mills Music Trust periodically issues reports to its unit holders, and these reports are attached as exhibits to Form 8-K filings. For example, an 8-K dated September 29, 2025 notes that the trust issued a report to unit holders containing computation details regarding the payment it received attributable to the second quarter of 2025. Another 8-K dated December 18, 2025 refers to a quarterly distribution report that includes computation details regarding payments received in the fourth quarter of 2025.
These reports provide transparency to unit holders regarding how payments received by the trust are calculated and distributed. The filings label these documents as quarterly distribution reports and identify them as Exhibit 99.1 to the relevant Form 8-K.
Regulatory and trading status
The SEC cover pages for the recent Form 8-K filings list no securities of Mills Music Trust as registered under Section 12(b) of the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. The tables in these filings show “N/A” for the title of each class, trading symbol, and the name of each exchange on which registered. This indicates that, according to these filings, there are no securities of the trust registered for trading on a national securities exchange under Section 12(b). The filings do not provide additional detail on any other trading venue.
The trust continues to file current reports on Form 8-K in connection with material events such as settlements affecting its payment structure and the issuance of quarterly distribution reports. These filings provide investors and unit holders with official information about contractual changes and the resulting financial implications for the trust.
Role of the corporate trustee
The filings identify HSBC Bank U.S.A., N.A. as the corporate trustee for Mills Music Trust. References to the corporate trustee appear in the signature blocks of the Form 8-K filings. As corporate trustee, HSBC Bank U.S.A., N.A. is responsible for executing and filing the reports on behalf of the trust and for administering the trust’s obligations as described in the filings.
Use of SEC filings for analysis
Investors researching Mills Music Trust CBI (MMTRS) can use the SEC filings to understand the trust’s contractual arrangements, the structure of its contingent payments, and the adjustments to those arrangements over time. The detailed descriptions of the settlement with EMI and the amendments to the Asset Purchase Agreement provide insight into how future payments to the trust may be calculated and what limitations apply to deductions and offsets.
Because the available information is drawn from SEC filings, it focuses on legal and financial arrangements rather than on a traditional operating business. Users interested in MMTRS can review these filings to better understand the trust’s income sources, the role of EMI in making payments, and the mechanisms by which those payments are ultimately reported and distributed to unit holders.
Frequently Asked Questions
Mills Music Trus investment returns
How much would $1,000 invested in Mills Music Trus be worth today?
If you invested $1,000 in Mills Music Trus (MMTRS) 1 years ago on 2025-07-28, your investment would be worth $931 today, representing a -6.9% total return, growing at a compounded rate of -7.2% per year (CAGR).
Has Mills Music Trus outperformed the S&P 500?
Comparison data requires at least 10 years of trading history. Use the calculator above to compare MMTRS performance over available time periods.
What is Mills Music Trus's average annual return?
The compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of MMTRS over the past 1 years is -7.2%, growing at a compounded rate each year. Individual years vary significantly — MMTRS's best recent year was 2026 (+6.4%) and worst was 2025 (-37.4%).
Your Privacy is Protected
This calculator sends the symbol, date, and amount you enter to our server so we can fetch historical market data and render the result. We do not save those entries as a portfolio or account, but standard web server logs may still record the page request.
For informational and educational purposes only — not investment advice.