Company: KW
Filing Date: 2025-03-03
Form Type: 424B3
Source: 0001408100-25-000092
Chunk: 200

Company: Kennedy-Wilson Holdings, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-03-03
Form: 424B3
Chunk 200
---
 of its subsidiaries or otherwise terminated a relationship with the Company or any of its subsidiaries will be expected to comply with the terms of this Policy for the period of time during which such individuals are in possession of Inside Information until its public release and absorption by the securities market. All of the above-described individuals who are subject to this Policy are referred to herein as “ Insiders .”

#### 3.

#### Insider Trading Laws

#### Securities Covered
The types of securities that may be involved in insider trading include, without limitation, common and preferred stock, bonds and other debt securities if and when issued by the Company or any of its subsidiaries, as well as puts, calls, straddles, options and derivative instruments with respect to such securities. The insider trading laws and this Policy cover not only the Company’s securities but also the securities (and derivatives thereof) of the Company’s subsidiaries and affiliates as well as any other company if you learn something (other than general industry knowledge) during the course of your relationship with the Company or its subsidiaries that is material nonpublic information with respect to such other company. By way of example, learning that the Company’s subsidiary for whom you work may be entering into a contract with a particular company and then trading in the stock of either the Company, the subsidiary for whom you work, or such other company on the basis of such knowledge could be a violation of federal and state laws (as well as this Policy), if information concerning such proposed contract is not known to the general public. Even trading in the stock of a customer or supplier on the basis of nonpublic information overheard or learned may be a violation.

#### Forms of Inside Information
As noted above, Inside Information is information that is both material and nonpublic. In general, information is considered material if typical investors would likely consider it to be significant in arriving at a decision to buy, sell or hold the stock of a company or would view its disclosure as significantly altering the “total mix” of information available to such investors. Information also is material if it would likely cause a change in the price of a company’s securities if such information became public. Information pertaining to possible future events, such as the potential development of a particular business combination, may be considered material.

For any material information to be considered Inside Information, the information also must be nonpublic. Information should be considered nonpublic when it has not been made available to members of the investing public. It is important to note that even after information is disclosed to the general public or the market, such information still