Small Tesla ownership changes

- Asset Management One trimmed its Tesla position by roughly 0.7% in fourth‑quarter filings. - Moran Wealth Management increased its Tesla stake by about 60.1%, holding approximately $1.55 million in shares. - These modest 13F changes are convenient inputs for a scrape‑and‑test project linking ownership turnover to volatility. ( )

Two Tesla shareholders made opposite moves in late fourth-quarter filings: Asset Management One cut slightly, while Moran Wealth Management bought more. (marketbeat.com) Asset Management One Co. Ltd. reported 1,321,071 Tesla shares after selling 9,339 shares, a 0.7% trim, in a Form 13F filing tied to the quarter ended December 31, 2025. The stake was valued at about $606.8 million, and Tesla was listed as roughly 1.7% of the firm’s portfolio and its 10th-largest holding. (marketbeat.com) Moran Wealth Management LLC moved the other way, lifting its Tesla position by 60.1% to 3,450 shares after buying 1,295 shares in the same quarter. Its filing valued the holding at about $1.552 million. (marketbeat.com) Form 13F is the Securities and Exchange Commission report that large money managers file to show many of their U.S.-listed stock holdings. The reports arrive up to 45 days after each quarter ends, so April filings are still describing positions as of December 31. (sec.gov) (nasdaq.com) That lag makes these disclosures a record of who was rotating into or out of Tesla at year-end, not a live read on April trading. Tesla appeared in 4,603 fourth-quarter 2025 filings tracked by 13F.info, which puts these two updates in a much larger stream of ownership data. (13f.info) (sec.gov) The raw moves here are small in market terms: Asset Management One’s sale was less than 10,000 shares, while Moran’s entire position remained under 3,500 shares. But both filings add dated, manager-level observations that can be scraped and compared against later price swings in Tesla stock. (marketbeat.com 1) (marketbeat.com 2) Tesla’s ownership file is crowded enough that researchers can test whether bursts of buying, selling, or turnover line up with volatility after the fact. These two filings do not say why the firms changed their positions, but they do add one more pair of datapoints to that quarterly ownership map. (13f.info) (sec.gov)

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