Company: IVHI
Filing Date: 2025-03-03
Form Type: 10-K
Source: 0001683168-25-001303
Chunk: 56

Company: Invech Holdings, Inc.
Filing Date: 2025-03-03
Form: 10-K
Item: Item 1A
Chunk 56
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 on
the OTC Markets platform

Our stock quote is currently listed on OTC Markets. The market for
our stock is uncertain at this time. Our stock is not eligible for proprietary broker-dealer quotations.
All quotes in our stock reflect unsolicited customer orders. Unsolicited-Only stocks have a higher risk of wider spreads, increased volatility,
and price dislocations. Investors may have difficulty selling this stock. An initial review by a broker-dealer under SEC Rule15c2-11 is
required for brokers to publish competing quotes and provide continuous market making. Our securities could be particularly illiquid
due to being listed on this market and that if we remain on the Pink Current Information, it could impede a potential merger, acquisition,
reverse merger or our current business pursuant to which the company could cease to be an operating company.

 7 

The regulation of penny
stocks by the SEC may discourage the tradability of our securities.  

We are a "penny stock"
company. Our common stock trades on the OTCQB and we are subject to a SEC rule that imposes special sales practice requirements upon broker-dealers
who sell such securities to persons other than established customers or accredited investors. For purposes of the rule, the phrase "accredited
investors" means, in general terms, institutions with assets in excess of $5,000,000, or individuals having a net worth in excess
of $1,000,000 or having an annual income that exceeds $200,000 (or that, when combined with a spouse’s income, exceeds $300,000). For
transactions covered by the rule, the broker-dealer must make a special suitability determination for the purchaser and receive the purchaser’s
written agreement to the transaction prior to the sale. Effectively, this discourages broker-dealers from executing trades in penny stocks.
Consequently, the rule will affect the ability of investors to sell their securities in any market that might develop therefore because
it imposes additional regulatory burdens on penny stock transactions.

In addition, the SEC has adopted a number
of rules to regulate "penny stocks". Such rules include Rules 3a51-1, 15g-1, 15g-2, 15g-3, 15g-4, 15g-5, 15g-6, 15g-7, and 15g-9
under the Securities Exchange Act of 1934, as amended. Because our securities constitute "penny stocks"