Explore the full management transaction log of Meso Numismatics, INC., a listed issuer based in United States. Shares are listed on US US, under the authority of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Others sector, Meso Numismatics, INC. has published 2 public disclosures. The latest transaction was disclosed on 19 August 2021 — Attribution. Among the most active insiders: Christensen David Eugene. The full history is free.
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Meso Numismatics, Inc. is a United States-based specialty company focused on numismatics and related collectible assets. The business centers on coins, banknotes, medals, tokens, and other monetary collectibles, placing it in a niche intersection of trading, historical expertise, authentication, and tangible-asset valuation. For French-speaking investors, the company should be viewed as a small-cap style U.S. listing with a highly specialized commercial model rather than a broad-based industrial or consumer franchise. Its public visibility is driven largely by SEC disclosures, including Form 4 insider transaction filings, which are often the most closely watched source of information for thinly followed issuers. The company’s history appears to trace back to an original organization formed in Washington State in 1999 under a different name, before evolving into Meso Numismatics through a rebranding and business repositioning. Public disclosures also indicate that it became a fully reporting company with the SEC, an important step for transparency and investor access. This background suggests a long corporate history but one that has remained small, specialized, and relatively under the radar of mainstream equity research. The business model therefore depends less on scale economics and more on credibility, sourcing capability, and the ability to monetize rare inventory. Operationally, Meso Numismatics has described itself as a numismatic and technology-oriented company and has highlighted an online store presence as well as participation in major auctions. In practice, its commercial activity appears to rely on buying, curating, marketing, and reselling collectible items to enthusiasts, dealers, and specialized buyers. In this type of business, inventory quality, provenance, grading, and historical relevance are essential. Margins can be attractive on rare items, but performance is also exposed to sourcing risk, price volatility, and the inherently uneven liquidity of collectibles markets. From a competitive standpoint, Meso Numismatics operates in a fragmented landscape that includes independent dealers, auction houses, online platforms, and larger numismatic marketplaces. Its differentiation likely comes from specialization in the Meso region, including Central America and the Caribbean, and from the depth of its collector-facing offering. That specialization may help it stand out, but it also means the company’s addressable market is narrower than that of more diversified retail or e-commerce businesses. Investors should therefore think of it as a niche play with potentially idiosyncratic upside, but also with elevated execution risk and limited operating visibility. The company is headquartered in the United States. Its equity reference market in the broader U.S. ecosystem is not NYSE or NASDAQ but the OTC market, which is important context for liquidity, disclosure cadence, and investor base. Recent publicly available signals emphasize ongoing SEC reporting and insider transaction activity rather than large-scale corporate events or material operating expansion. For that reason, the stock is best analyzed through a governance-and-disclosure lens, with attention to insider behavior, reporting quality, and the company’s ability to maintain a credible niche brand in the numismatics sector.