Quick Facts
FONT-SIZE Plus   Neg
Share SHARE
mail  E-MAIL

Britton & Koontz Capital Notifies Nasdaq Of Intent To Delist Stock

6/29/2012 2:11 PM ET

Britton & Koontz Capital Corp. (BKBK: Quote), the parent company of Britton & Koontz Bank N.A., said Friday it has today notified the NASDAQ Stock Market of its intent to delist its common stock from the NASDAQ Capital Market and to shortly file a related notification with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The company anticipates that its common stock will trade on the over-the-counter markets following the completion of its delisting from the NASDAQ Capital Market.

Subsequent to the effective date of delisting, the company also intends to take the necessary action to deregister its common stock. The company is eligible to deregister because it has fewer than 1,200 holders of record of its common stock.

The Board determined that delisting and deregistration of the company's common stock is in the best interests of the company and its shareholders and is based on factors including the high costs in preparing and filing periodic reports with the SEC and its historically low trading volume.

Click here to receive FREE breaking news email alerts for Britton & Koontz Capital Corp. and others in your portfolio

by RTT Staff Writer

For comments and feedback: editorial@rttnews.com

Business News

Quick Facts

Editors Pick
Gap Inc. Thursday after the markets closed that its first quarter profit rose 43% from last year, helped by higher sales and improved margins. The company's quarterly earnings per share also came in above analysts' expectations as did its quarterly sales. At the same time, the company eaffirmed its fiscal year 2013 earnings outlook, which is below analysts' current consensus estimate. After moving sharply lower at the start of trading on Thursday, stocks showed a substantial recovery attempt over the course of the trading day. The rebound came as upbeat housing data helped offset worries about the Federal Reserve. The major averages climbed well off their worst levels of the day but still ended the session in the red. President Barack Obama delivered a highly-anticipated speech on his administration's evolving counterterrorism policies on Thursday, suggesting that the U.S. needs to move away from a "boundless global war on terror." More than a decade after the 9/11 attacks, Obama argued that the terrorist threat has shifted and evolved.
FREE Newsletters, Analysis & Alerts

 

Stay informed with our FREE daily Newsletters and real-time breaking News Alerts. Sign up to receive the latest information on business news, health, technology, biotech, market analysis, currency trading and more.