Summary: Investors often ask where to grab the newest quarterly and annual reports for companies like the one behind "AMV" stock (Atlis Motor Vehicles, now going by Nxu, Inc., ticker AMV). Here’s a hands-on walkthrough for accessing these statements fast, why official sources matter, what snags you might hit, and what sets US disclosure requirements apart from those in other countries. Plus, I’ll share my personal fumbles and lessons in chasing down financials, a mini-case comparing the US with the EU, and wisdom from the SEC itself (SEC.gov).
Let’s get real: sometimes you Google "AMV financial report" and end up on random blogs, or worse, investor forums where someone’s cousin claims to have 'leaked' numbers. Skip that—I’ll show you the exact path to official, verified data. Trust me, the few extra clicks at the source now will save hours of confusion (and embarrassment) later.
For all US-listed companies, financial filings are publicly available (and required!) via the SEC’s EDGAR system. This isn’t just advice—it’s a legal requirement per the Securities Exchange Act of 1934. Filings like 10-K (annual) and 10-Q (quarterly) are uploaded here.
Screenshot: SEC EDGAR, searching by ticker (AMV) or company name brings up all filings. [Direct link to AMV's filings]
This is your bread and butter. The annual report is the 10-K, while quarterly results are in the 10-Q. For events like share offerings or major news, look for 8-K filings.
The EDGAR page will display these in chronological order. The latest filing sits at the top.
Example: Here you see the most recent 10-Q, a previous 10-K, and several 8-Ks for Nxu, Inc. (AMV).
Sometimes, investor relations (IR) websites are easier to navigate, and they look nicer for non-accounting types. In AMV’s case, check Nxu’s official IR page. Here, annual reports and press releases are posted, usually timed with SEC filings.
Don’t trust a company? Always double-check the IR website figures against those on SEC EDGAR. I’ve found discrepancies before, especially in summary numbers. As per SEC investor guidance, the legal record is the one in EDGAR.
Screenshot: Nxu's IR page. It's visually friendlier, but official filings come from EDGAR.
Here’s where things get spicy: US filings are fiercely standardized, but other countries handle “verified trade” disclosures differently. For instance, Europe uses the Transparency Directive (Directive 2004/109/EC), enforced through national regulators. The US is all about centralized disclosure (EDGAR, mandatory Sarbanes-Oxley compliance), while the EU and Asia often split requirements by country or let stock exchanges drive the process (ESMA).
Country/Region | Disclosure Name | Legal Basis | Enforcement Body |
---|---|---|---|
USA | EDGAR (10-K, 10-Q) |
Securities Exchange Act of 1934 Sarbanes-Oxley Act of 2002 |
SEC (sec.gov) |
European Union | Universal Registration Document, Annual Report | EU Transparency Directive (2004/109/EC) | National Financial Authority / ESMA (esma.europa.eu) |
Japan | Yuho, Quarterly Securities Report | Financial Instruments and Exchange Act | JFSA (EDINET) |
Picture this: An American fund is doing due diligence for an M&A target based in Germany (listed in Frankfurt) and checks their annual “Universal Registration Document” via BaFin’s database. The analyst sees a different revenue recognition timing and higher restatement risk compared with what SEC filings force AMV, or any US company, to show. In practice, I’ve found this means more detective work in Europe—documents are split by market, language, and sometimes have voluntary, not mandatory, reconciliations.
I once botched a sourcing project by relying on an English summary instead of the official, stamped German report (rookie mistake, but it happens). A friend in compliance later grumbled: “For US stocks? EDGAR, always. For Europe? Learn to read the local version, or pony up for a Bloomberg Terminal.” Valid point.
“It’s hard to overstate the value of EDGAR. Everything’s timestamped, everyone’s on the same playing field, and enforcement is real. If you’re doing global comparison, recognize that not every region gives you one-click access to unredacted, audit-backed quarterly financials.”
— Sarah Young, Senior Analyst, CFA, as told to me at the CFA Society New York, 2023.
If you’re after AMV’s current financials, start with EDGAR. It’s the standard for a reason: fast, public, and legally binding. Layer in the company’s own IR page for clarity, but treat that as a supplement.
My main takeaway after years wrangling with corporate finance data? Skip the bells and whistles. Go where compliance is enforced, and you’ll spend less time worrying you’ve missed a footnote.
And if you ever get stuck in a forum debate on “where the numbers really live”—ask for the link to the SEC filing. It’ll end most arguments before they start.