Browse the full insider trade history of Vinco Ventures, Inc., a listed equity based in United States. Shares trade on US US, under the oversight of SEC (Form 4). Operating in the Media & Communication sector, Vinco Ventures, Inc. has published 4 public disclosures. Market capitalisation: €324.8m. The latest transaction was filed on 24 January 2022 (Cession). Among the most active insiders: McFillin Phillip Anthony. All data is free.
FY ended December 2021 · cache
4 of 4 declarations
Vinco Ventures, Inc. is a United States-listed company historically associated with the NASDAQ market, although its recent equity story has been dominated by delisting notices, reporting issues, and broader restructuring uncertainty. For French, Belgian, and Swiss investors, this is not a conventional large-cap consumer or media name; it is best viewed as a speculative turnaround situation whose value depends on governance discipline, asset monetization, and the company’s ability to rebuild a coherent operating model. The company was incorporated in July 2017 in Nevada and later changed its name and strategic focus several times as it tried to reposition itself. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1717556/000149315221022026/form424b3.htm?utm_source=openai)) Vinco Ventures originally described itself as a vertically integrated consumer products company, aiming to participate in every step of the product lifecycle, from ideation and research and development through manufacturing, sales, packaging, and fulfillment. Its disclosures also referenced sales through a network of manufacturers, distributors, and retailers, which positioned the business as a consumer-product commercialization platform rather than a pure manufacturer. Over time, however, the company shifted part of its strategic emphasis toward digital media and content technologies, including activities linked to Lomotif and media-related partnerships. That transition materially changed the company’s investment profile and made its business mix more difficult to model with confidence. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1717556/000149315221022026/form424b3.htm?utm_source=openai)) From an industry perspective, Vinco now sits closer to Media & Communications than to a traditional industrial or consumer-staples issuer. Its history includes efforts to build brand awareness, commercialize consumer offerings, and later participate in digital media ecosystems and audience-acquisition assets. The company’s competitive position has generally been weak relative to larger U.S. platforms, and it has not established a durable scale advantage, proprietary distribution moat, or consistently profitable operating base. As a result, the core investment question is whether management can convert fragmented assets into a credible, cash-generative structure. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1717556/000149315221026263/form424b3.htm?utm_source=openai)) Geographically, the company is based in the United States and operates as a U.S.-listed issuer, with its public-market history centered on NASDAQ. That market context matters because the stock’s trading narrative has been shaped by exchange compliance issues. Nasdaq announced in 2023 that it would delist Vinco Ventures’ common stock, following earlier deficiency notices tied to late SEC filings. Those events are important for investors because they signal elevated execution risk, limited visibility, and a distressed equity profile. ([nasdaq.com](https://www.nasdaq.com/press-release/vinco-ventures-announces-receipt-of-deficiency-notice-from-nasdaq-regarding-failure?utm_source=openai)) Recent developments have been less about expansion than about corporate stabilization and asset repositioning. Public SEC materials over the last few years point to repeated strategic shifts, transactional activity, and a move away from the company’s original consumer-products ambition. For investors screening SEC Form 4 insider transactions, the key takeaway is that Vinco Ventures remains a highly event-driven situation: insider activity may be relevant, but it should be interpreted in the context of a company facing exchange-status uncertainty and a still-evolving strategic identity. ([sec.gov](https://www.sec.gov/Archives/edgar/data/1717556/000149315221029612/form10-q.htm?utm_source=openai))