SCO - Insider Trading and Holdings Disclosure
ProShares - UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil (SCO) operates in the Financial Services sector, specifically the Asset Management - Leveraged industry, with a market capitalization near $57.6M, listed on AMEX, carrying a beta of -2.43 to the broader market. ProShares UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil seeks daily investment results, before fees and expenses, that correspond to two times the inverse (-2x) of the daily performance of the Bloomberg Commodity Balanced WTI Crude Oil Index. public since 2008-11-25.
ProShares - UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil (SCO) is an exchange-traded fund rather than an operating company, so the Section 16 insider-trading rules that produce Form 3/4/5 filings on equity tickers do not apply. ETFs do not have corporate officers, directors, or 10% shareholders in the registrant sense; the relevant disclosure surface for an ETF is its holdings schedule and the sponsor's investment-company filings.
- Exchange
- AMEX
- Sector
- Financial Services
- Industry
- Asset Management - Leveraged
- Market Cap
- $57.6M
- IPO Date
- 2008-11-25
- Beta
- -2.43
What Disclosures Apply to SCO as an ETF?
Registered ETFs disclose at the fund level via the N-1A (open-end) or N-2 (closed-end) prospectus, N-CSR and N-CSRS shareholder reports with audited or reviewed financials, N-PX annual proxy-voting records, and N-CEN annual census filings, all searchable through SEC EDGAR. Many ETFs additionally publish daily holdings on the sponsor's website; index-tracking funds rebalance against published index methodology rather than discretionary insider activity.
How ETF Holdings Affect Options Pricing
For options traders, the analog to insider-trading on equity tickers is the constituent-level news and earnings flow for the top holdings. Concentration risk in a thematic or sector ETF means a small number of constituents drive most of the price action and most of the implied-volatility surface. Single-name catalysts (earnings, M&A, regulatory rulings) on top holdings flow through to the ETF's implied volatility, skew, and dealer gamma profile. Pair the SCO volatility skew and gamma exposure with the per-constituent news cycle to see how single-name flow propagates into the fund's options chain.
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Frequently asked SCO insider trading questions
- Does SCO have corporate insiders to track?
- ProShares - UltraShort Bloomberg Crude Oil (SCO) is an exchange-traded fund, so the Section 16 insider-trading rules that produce Form 3, 4, and 5 filings on equity tickers do not apply. ETFs do not have corporate officers, directors, or 10% beneficial-owner shareholders in the registrant sense. The relevant disclosure surface for an ETF is its holdings schedule and the sponsor's investment-company filings on SEC EDGAR.
- What disclosures does SCO make at the fund level?
- Registered ETFs disclose at the fund level via the N-1A (open-end) or N-2 (closed-end) prospectus with subsequent 485 updates, N-CSR and N-CSRS semi-annual and annual shareholder reports with audited or reviewed financials, N-PX annual proxy-voting records, and N-CEN annual census filings, all searchable through SEC EDGAR. Many ETFs additionally publish daily holdings on the sponsor's website; index-tracking funds rebalance against published index methodology rather than discretionary insider activity.
- How does constituent-level news flow through SCO?
- For options traders, the analog to insider-trading on equity tickers is the constituent-level news and earnings flow for the top holdings. Concentration risk in a thematic or sector ETF means a small number of constituents drive most of the price action and most of the implied-volatility surface. Single-name catalysts (earnings, M&A, regulatory rulings) on top holdings flow through to the ETF's implied volatility, skew, and dealer gamma profile.
- Where can I find SCO holdings and AP activity?
- Daily holdings are typically published on the sponsor's website for transparent ETFs; full-year audited holdings appear in the N-CSR shareholder report. Authorized-participant creation and redemption baskets are not disclosed at the individual-AP level, but aggregate creation and redemption activity is observable through fund-level share-count changes reported in the daily NAV file and quarterly Form 13F filings of large institutional holders that include the ETF in their portfolios.